22 Sneaky Scams People Fall For On A Daily Basis
Carly Tennes
Published
04/11/2024
in
facepalm
We all know the tricks and traps of common scams — ignore wealthy Nigerian princes asking for money, understand that no one is trying to reach you about your car’s extended warranty and whatever you do, do NOT hand $50,000 in cash to a stranger in a car.
But not all scams are fake wrong-number texts or faux sweepstakes. There are a whole lot of schemes lurking in the shadows of our day-to-day lives — a few you may have even fallen for today.
From the truth about Internet quizzes to the true cost of life coaching services, here are 20 sneaky scams people don’t realize are actually scams.
- List View
- Player View
- Grid View
Advertisement
-
1.
-
2.
-
3.
-
4.
-
5.
-
6. Charities
-
7. Plastic Recycling
“My city just recently had to admit that all of our recycling has been treated as regular trash for years because we weren't in compliance with the recycling company's guidelines. In that time, the city had been fining people for having improper items in their recycle tote, but the citizens didn't know the city wasn't recycling anymore. Messy” —Xystal -
8. Gift Cards
“Gift cards. You’ve just traded currency spendable anywhere in the world for currency good at only one place. And that’s IF you spend the gift cards. Many don’t and the places where gift cards are spendable count on that as part of profits. Give me cash, please. You can put a fancy bow on it.” —barbie399 -
9. Free Trials
-
10. Cold Medicine
“Phenylephrine. It’s a d—g commonly used to treat cold symptoms when taken orally, and is labeled as a decongestant. If you have a cold medication like DayQuil at home, if you read the label it likely includes Phenylephrine as an “active” ingredient. But it’s a scam! Phenylephrine performed no better than placebo in multiple medical trials. It’s literally a scam and doesn’t work. It’s a bit of a personal vendetta of mine that something that is being sold as medicine OTC is literally no better than taking nothing at all.” —Kariwinkle -
11. Timeshares
“I've worked at a timeshare in Las Vegas. It. Is. All. A. Scam! From the time you enter the building, they use manipulation to control you while you go through the sales pitch. They aren't forthcoming with fees, especially maintenance fees, they dont tell you how to get out of the timeshare "ownership". You're not always guaranteed to use of your timeshare. Spin the board, you COULD win up to $1,000! - one trick they use to keep you there.” —up_N2_no_good -
12. Self-Checkout Donations
“Donations/ rounding up at self checkout at some stores. Sure, the money is donated but corporations use them as tax write-offs. Might as well do your own donations and take the tax benefit for yourself.” —Wohv6 -
13. Cryptocurrency
“When the crypto boom occurred at the same time as Covid, I purchased a small amount of crypto and at the same time someone at work explained they bought some via a broker and doubled their money. Then gave them more money and doubled it again and so on. My response was 'sounds like a scam' and I explained why, but they did not believe me. They got their brother involved too. Not long after, yep was a scam. She lost around £15k, not a small number. Just wished I convinced her!!” —hight0w3r -
14. Enrollment Fees
-
15. Store Credit Cards
“Store credit cards. They'll make most people spend 5x more at that store than they otherwise might because of sunk cost / use it or lose it fallacies. Basically allowing a store to put a parasite in your wallet. That's not even considering the interest.” —DoNotEatMySoup -
16. Health Insurance
-
17. Megachurches
“Organized religion. If you are paying someone 10% of your salary, and his daily driver is a super car ( or he has a private jet), you've been scammed.” —Wide_Wrongdoer4422 -
18. Retail Sales
“Retail sales pricing is a psychological trick to get you to buy more, not a special favor to you from the retailer. If you weren't already going to purchase an item, you're getting burned by spending more than $0 for it on sale. The whole subculture of coupon cutting and deal seeking feels like a way to save a buck by targeting the lowest possible price... When in reality you're wasting tons of money buying unnecessary junk that's presented as a ‘great deal.’ If you focus more on the utility of your purchase and how much use you'll get out of an item, you'll be better off financially than focusing on the cheapest $ price tags.” —Own_Shallot7926 -
19. Bottled Water
“People are paying for convenience, not so much the product. Also bottled water does have some valid uses - in case of major disasters. Some places in the world where potable water is an issue, bottled water is a convenient way to distribute it right at the door. But in many many places, yes, bottled water is not required and quite frankly just a luxury.” —nutano -
20. Expiration Dates
“Expiration dates. Stuff like cereal and canned food stays good way longer than they print on the product. There was a documentary series on Netflix a while back where they said companies will purposely deceive people into thinking food goes bad quickly so they keep buying more and more. And if people realized that packaged food lasts longer than what is printed, these companies would lose millions of dollars.” —KC_Frosty -
21. Internet Quizzes
“I saw one yesterday that was "Looking for classic names! What was your grandmother's name?" And many of the comments were giving first and middle names! Another one I saw last week was "You have to name your baby after where you met your partner. What is your baby's new name?" Like???? These are security questions people!” —mikitiale -
22. Life Coaches
“I knew two life coaches. Both of them were on welfare and tried to teach people how to be successful in life. They took a short e-course about how to be a life coach.” —manykeets -
23. Dating Apps
“If you're legitimately trying to date, it gets tiring matching with accounts that are trying to get you to sign up for their OF or cam site rather than have a real conversation and go on a date.” —max_power1000 -
24. Multi-Level Marketing Schemes
“Multi-level marketing (MLM) schemes often parade as ‘incredible business opportunities.’ They're like those matryoshka dolls, where every level opens up to reveal another ‘opportunity’ to spend your money and pester friends to join.” —HistoricalHomework18 -
25. Expert Directories
-
26.
“Unlimited data! ...until you use too much in which then they slow down your data so much that you can't even watch a 480p video without slowdown. But hey, unlimited right?” -
27.
The claw is literally programmed to fail
7 Comments