“Scamfluencers” are a new breed of social media personality that leverages their perceived credibility, expertise, or popularity to orchestrate sophisticated scams, often targeting thousands of followers at once. They pose as everything from investment gurus to health experts, and they’re very successful—Americans reported losing $1.9 billion to social media scams in 2024.
Adewale Adeife, a cybersecurity consultant at EY, told Investopedia, “Scamfluencers merge their online popularity with advanced deception techniques, making them especially dangerous.”
Below, we’ll discuss how to spot scamfluencers and protect yourself from their schemes.
Key Takeaways
- Scamfluencers use social media influence to deceive followers for personal gain, often through emotional manipulation, artificial social proof, and claiming expertise they don’t actually have.
- While most scammers still rely on low-tech manipulation, they are increasingly leveraging AI, including deepfakes, and using engagement pods to appear credible and trustworthy.
- Protecting yourself means verifying claims, scrutinizing backgrounds, and reporting suspicious activity to authorities.
How Scamfluencers Operate
Social media scamfluencers employ a range of tactics to manipulate and defraud their audiences, fabricating credentials and expertise to gain people’s trust. “They create the illusion of authority, sometimes even posing as doctors or financial advisors,” Adeife told Investopedia.
In one notorious case, then-teenager Malachi Love-Robinson donned a lab coat and brushed up on medical jargon to convince both patients and professionals that he was a doctor.
Fabricating artificial social proof is another common tactic. Scamfluencers purchase fake likes, or join engagement pods, where participants boost each other’s content to appear more popular. Some have begun to use AI tools and deepfakes to impersonate authority figures, further blurring the line between real and fake.
Time-sensitive offers, exclusive “insider” tips, and emotional appeals are also typical. Adeife notes that scamfluencers often pressure followers with urgent deals and showcase “get-rich-quick” results, relying on fake testimonials and success stories.
Psychological Manipulation and Red Flags
Scamfluencers are adept at exploiting psychological biases such as authority bias, which leads people to trust those who appear knowledgeable or famous. The “consistency principle” nudges victims to make small commitments that escalate over time. Emotional manipulation—playing on fear, greed, or compassion—makes followers more likely to act without due diligence.
So how can you spot a scamfluencer? Adeife recommends watching for:
- Inconsistent or vague professional backgrounds
- Pressure to use unconventional payment methods (like gift cards or crypto)
- Overly perfect or guaranteed results
- Defensive or dismissive responses to questions or criticism
How to Protect Yourself
To guard against scamfluencers, experts advise:
- Verify credentials: Cross-check an influencer’s background and claims.
- Be skeptical of urgency: Avoid offers that require immediate action or secrecy.
- Watch for payment red flags: Legitimate businesses rarely insist on payment in crypto or gift cards.
- Report suspicious activity: If you think you’ve been scammed, cease communication, preserve evidence, contact your bank, and file reports with law enforcement and cybercrime authorities.
Social media platforms and cybersecurity professionals are intensifying their efforts to identify and eliminate scamfluencer content. They are leveraging AI to detect fake accounts and deepfakes while also sharing intelligence across various industries. But ultimately, vigilance and critical thinking remain the best defenses.
The Bottom Line
Scamfluencers are a growing threat in the digital age, blending influence with deception to exploit trust on a massive scale. If you can recognize their tactics and stay alert to red flags, you can protect yourself, and help build a safer, more authentic online community.