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Scam Awareness · Field Guide

How to Spot a Crypto Scam — and What You Can Actually Recover

Crypto scams reuse a handful of playbooks. Once you can recognise the shape of each one, they get far easier to avoid — and if you’ve already been caught, knowing how recovery works tells you what to do in the hours that matter most.

Cryptowledge · Scam Awareness · 8 min read

Every week we review cases that feel unique to the person who lost the money but fall into a small number of well-worn patterns. The platform changes, the story changes, the amount changes — the mechanics rarely do. This guide walks through five of the most common crypto scams we see, the single tell that gives each one away, and an honest picture of what recovery looks like afterwards. Every pattern links to a full, illustrative case study you can read in detail.

The one rule that stops most scams

If you remember only one thing, make it this: no legitimate platform, person or ‘support agent’ ever needs you to send extra crypto to unlock your own funds, and no one ever needs your recovery phrase. Almost every case we handle crosses one of those two lines. Keep them in mind as you read.

Five scams, five tells

Here’s how the most common patterns work — and the recovery story behind each.

What recovery actually looks like

Look again at the recovery figures above: 81% in one case, 12% in another. That spread is the honest reality. Recovery depends on how fast the funds are reported, whether they touched a regulated exchange and the payment method used. Money that has already passed through a mixer or been cashed out is usually gone; funds that pause on a compliant exchange can often be frozen and partly returned. Anyone promising a guaranteed full recovery is selling the next scam.

If it has just happened: the first 24 hours

  • Stop all contact and send no further payments — especially any ‘fee’ to release funds.
  • Write down every address, transaction, username and screenshot while it’s fresh.
  • Report to your exchange and bank immediately; card payments may be reversible.
  • File a report with your national fraud body (for example IC3 in the US, Action Fraud in the UK).
  • Get an honest assessment before paying anyone for ‘recovery.’
Read the full case studies

Five detailed, illustrative breakdowns of how each scam unfolds and how stolen funds are traced.

View the case studies →

Not sure what you’re dealing with?

Send us the details. We’ll review your case and give you a straight answer on what can be recovered — with no upfront fee.

Disclaimer: Cryptowledge provides digital-asset investigative and recovery-assistance services. Past case outcomes do not guarantee future recovery. Recovery is not possible in every case and depends on the specific circumstances, transaction path, and cooperation of third parties. Cryptowledge is not a law firm, financial advisor, or regulated financial institution and does not provide legal, tax, or investment advice. All consultations are confidential. © 2026 Cryptowledge. All rights reserved.