The fake vacation rental scam takes your money before your trip even begins. Scammers copy the photos and descriptions of real villas and apartments, post them on classified sites and social media at a tempting price, and collect a "deposit" by wire transfer or cryptocurrency for a place they don't own — or that doesn't exist. You arrive to find no booking, no villa, and no way to get your money back. The defense is simple: book through recognized platforms, keep payment on-platform, and never wire money to a stranger.
How the Fake Vacation Rental Scam Works
It starts with a listing that looks great and costs a little less than everything comparable — the bait. The "host" steers you off the booking platform to email, WhatsApp, or a classified site, then asks for a deposit (or the full amount) by an untraceable method: bank wire, cryptocurrency, a gift card, or an app like Zelle. They'll add urgency — "another family is interested" — to rush you past your doubts, and they'll dodge a live video tour or any independent verification. The photos and even the address may belong to a genuine property the scammer has never been near. Once the money is sent, the listing and the "host" vanish.
Where You'll Encounter It
Anywhere vacation rentals are popular — and entirely before you travel:
- Jamaica and the Caribbean: villas and beach apartments are a favorite target, copied onto classified sites.
- Classified and social platforms everywhere: Craigslist, Facebook Marketplace and groups, and lookalike booking sites worldwide.
The Red Flags
- A price noticeably below comparable rentals, paired with urgency to book.
- A host pushing you to communicate and pay off the booking platform.
- Any request to pay by wire transfer, cryptocurrency, gift card, or a person-to-person app.
- Reluctance to do a live video tour or provide verifiable ownership details.
How to Avoid It
Book through recognized platforms such as Airbnb, Booking.com, or VRBO, and keep all communication and payment on the platform, where you have a record and recourse — a host who wants to take it off-platform "to save fees" is the warning sign. Never pay a deposit by wire transfer, crypto, or gift card to an individual. Reverse-image-search the listing photos to see if they appear elsewhere under a different name, search the exact address and property independently, and ask for a live video walk-through. If a deal feels too good and too urgent, it's bait.
What to Do if You're Scammed
Act immediately. If you paid by card or through a platform, contact them at once to dispute the charge — a bank wire can sometimes be recalled if you move fast, while crypto and gift cards are rarely recoverable. Report it to the platform, to local police, and in the U.S. to the FTC and the FBI's IC3. Keep every message and receipt. Our guide on what to do after a scam and how to report it walks through the steps.
See the full destination guides for every scam you'll meet on the ground, area by area.
Tourist scams in Jamaica →