Before You Report — Gather This Information

Having these ready makes filing fast and maximises the value of your report: Scammer contact details (phone numbers, email addresses, social media usernames, website URLs). Dates and timeline (when first contact was made, when money was sent). Payment details (amount, method, transaction IDs, gift card numbers/receipts, wire transfer reference numbers, cryptocurrency wallet addresses). Communication records (screenshots of texts, emails, chat messages — save before blocking). Names used (even if fake, they help identify patterns across complaints).

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Step 1: Report to the FTC — Always Do This First

The Federal Trade Commission is the primary consumer fraud reporting agency in the United States. Every scam report should start here, regardless of what type of scam it was.

⚖️Federal Trade Commission — ReportFraud.ftc.govStart Here

Online: ReportFraud.ftc.gov — the fastest method, takes about 15 minutes. You'll be asked what happened, how you paid, and basic scammer contact information. Be as specific as possible with dates, amounts, and descriptions.

By phone: 1-877-382-4357 (1-877-FTC-HELP), Monday–Friday 9am–5pm ET. Spanish: ReporteFraude.ftc.gov

What happens after you file: Your report enters the Consumer Sentinel Network — a database shared with over 2,000 federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies. The FTC uses complaint patterns to identify the largest fraud operations and bring enforcement actions. When the FTC wins cases, it pursues refunds for victims — you can see active refund programs at ftc.gov/refunds.

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Step 2: Report to the FBI — Essential for Large Losses or Online Fraud

The FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) handles cyber-enabled fraud — which includes virtually every modern scam conducted by phone, email, text, or online. File here if your scam involved any online component, any financial loss, or if you suspect the scammer operated internationally.

How to File with the FBI IC3

Online: IC3.gov — type this address directly into your browser, as scammers have created spoof sites. The complaint form takes 15–20 minutes.

Priority cases: IC3 pays particular attention to losses over $10,000, organised criminal networks, and cases involving cryptocurrency or international wire transfers. If you submitted a fraudulent wire transfer, mention it specifically — IC3's Recovery Asset Team can sometimes work with banks to freeze funds before they're moved.

Elder fraud specifically: The FBI has a dedicated elder fraud section at ic3.gov/crimeinfo/elderfraud. Operation Level Up — the FBI's proactive crypto fraud intervention program — is fed by IC3 complaints.

Need help filing? Call the National Elder Fraud Hotline at 833-FRAUD-11 (833-372-8311). Case managers can help you navigate the IC3 filing process.

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Step 3: Report to Your State Attorney General

State AGs have consumer protection divisions that accept fraud complaints and — importantly — have authority to pursue scammers operating in your state or targeting your state's residents. They sometimes have more agility than federal agencies for locally-operating fraud rings and can pursue civil remedies that lead directly to victim compensation.

Find Your State Attorney General

Directory: naag.org/find-my-ag — lists every state AG's consumer protection complaint portal

What to report: Any scam. AGs particularly focus on local business fraud, home repair scams, elder financial exploitation, and phone scams targeting state residents.

Tip: If the scammer impersonated a local business or government entity, your state AG is especially well-positioned to act.

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Step 4: Report to Specialised Agencies Based on Scam Type

Different scam types have specific agencies with authority and expertise. File with the specialised agency in addition to the FTC and FBI — not instead of them.

Investment & Cryptocurrency Fraud

IRS & Tax Fraud

Medicare Fraud

Social Security Impersonation

Mail Fraud

Phone & Robocall Fraud

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Step 5: File a Local Police Report

A local police report creates a formal legal document that some creditors and credit bureaus require when disputing fraudulent accounts. It may also connect your case to local investigations of the same scammer.

When filing, bring all your documentation — screenshots, receipts, transaction records. Ask for a copy of the report and keep it. Even if local police cannot investigate the scam itself (most are operated from overseas), the report has value as a legal document for your recovery process.

Does Reporting Actually Help?

This is a fair question. The honest answer is: your individual report will probably not lead directly to an arrest. But that's not how these agencies work.

Federal agencies aggregate thousands of complaints to build patterns. When enough reports point to the same operation — same phone numbers, same scripts, same payment methods — that pattern enables enforcement action. The FTC uses this data to identify the largest fraud networks and pursue injunctions, asset freezes, and refunds. The FBI uses IC3 data to build criminal cases that have led to arrests of international fraud rings.

The DOJ's victim compensation program has returned over $12 billion in forfeited assets to fraud victims since 2000 — money that was only recoverable because complaint data led investigators to seize those assets. Your report becomes one data point in a pattern that, collectively, can shut down a criminal operation.

Beyond enforcement, your FTC report immediately enters a database shared with over 2,000 law enforcement agencies. Your IC3 report goes to FBI investigators who may be working a case that your information helps close. And reporting helps the FTC publish consumer alerts that warn others about emerging scams before they become victims.

Reporting on Behalf of Someone Else

If your parent or loved one was scammed and needs help filing, you can report on their behalf at any of these agencies. The FTC accepts third-party reports. The National Elder Fraud Hotline (833-FRAUD-11) specifically exists to support family members helping an elder fraud victim navigate the reporting process — case managers will guide you step by step.

Frequently Asked Questions

Probably not — these agencies receive millions of reports and cannot respond individually. This doesn't mean your report is ignored. It enters databases used actively by investigators. If the FTC brings a case that results in refunds and you were a victim, they will attempt to contact you. You can check for active refund programs at ftc.gov/refunds.
Never too late. Report regardless of when it happened. Law enforcement agencies build cases over time, and your report — even about an older incident — may be the piece that links multiple victims together and enables action. File at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and IC3.gov no matter how much time has passed.
Yes. The FBI and DOJ coordinate with international law enforcement through agreements that have led to arrests and asset seizures involving overseas scam operations. IC3 data has been directly used to support international investigations. Beyond potential enforcement, your report protects others by alerting agencies to the specific tactics, phone numbers, and methods being used.
No. These agencies receive millions of reports from people of every background, education level, and profession. Scams work because they're designed by experts to exploit normal human responses to fear, trust, and urgency. The National Elder Fraud Hotline (833-FRAUD-11) is specifically staffed to be understanding and non-judgmental — they exist to help, not to question your decisions.

Sources

Source for Sentinel partnership data. The network is accessed by law enforcement agencies across federal, state, local, and international partners.
Source for $12B+ victim compensation since 2000. DOJ Money Laundering, Narcotics and Forfeiture Section milestone announced April 2025.
Source for 1M+ complaints figure — 1,008,597 complaints received in 2025, the first time IC3 crossed the one-million mark in its 25-year history. Published April 2026.
All statistics are sourced from official government agencies and peer-reviewed research. Data is reviewed on an ongoing basis as new reports are released.