Is This Match.com Email a Scam? How to Tell
Match.com scams involve fake profile notifications, romance scams targeting users seeking long-term relationships, and phishing emails about subscription renewals.
Think you've received a scam?
Paste a suspicious message, email, or URL into our free AI-powered scanner for instant analysis.
Scan Now — It's FreeCommon Match.com Scam Types
Example Scam Messages
These are examples of fake messages impersonating Match.com. Never click links in unsolicited messages.
“Match.com: Someone likes your profile! View at match-notification.com”
“Match.com: Your subscription will auto-renew for $239.99. Cancel at match-cancel.com”
Red Flags to Watch For
- Profile notifications from non-match.com domains
- Matches who claim to be deployed military and cannot video chat
- Requests for money for travel or medical emergencies
- Subscription cancellation links to non-match.com sites
Legitimate Match.com Contact Info
Visit match.com/help for support. Manage your subscription at match.com. Be cautious of matches who ask for money.
Live Community Flags
Recently reported Match.com scam variants from the Cautellus community. Flagged items include deepfake videos, cloned voicemail, and spoofed domains.
Community reporting for Match.com is launching soon. Submissions will appear here with timestamps and scam-type tags.
Report a Match.com scam you've received →Related Articles
Other Dating Scams
Think you've received a scam?
Paste a suspicious message, email, or URL into our free AI-powered scanner for instant analysis.
Scan Now — It's Free