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The Friendship Bracelet Scam

One of Europe's most common street hustles: a stranger gets a string onto your wrist, then demands payment. Here's how it works and how to shut it down.

✓ What the scam is
✓ How to avoid it
✓ Where it happens

The friendship bracelet scam is one of the most common street hustles in Europe's tourist cities. It's a forced-gift scam: a friendly stranger gets a colored string onto your wrist before you can react, then demands payment and turns aggressive if you refuse. It's not dangerous and it's easy to beat once you know the move — here's exactly how it works, where you'll run into it, and how to shut it down.

How the Friendship Bracelet Scam Works

The approach is warm and fast, and that's the whole trick. A vendor walks up calling you "my friend," maybe offers a handshake or asks where you're from, and in the same motion loops a braided string around your wrist or finger — or presses it into your hand and starts knotting. By the time you register what's happening, the "free gift" is on you. Then the tone changes: they demand payment, often far more than any bracelet is worth, and stand close, repeat the demand loudly, and try to make you feel that the easiest way out of an awkward scene is to hand over cash. Some work in pairs, so while your attention is on the bracelet and the confrontation, a second person is positioned to pick your pocket or bag.

Where You'll Encounter It

It shows up wherever tourists gather and slow down to take photos. The hotspots include:

  • Rome: the Spanish Steps, St. Peter's Square, and the bridges near the Vatican.
  • Barcelona: around the cathedral, the Gothic Quarter, and the waterfront.
  • Paris: the steps below Sacré-Cœur in Montmartre are especially notorious.
  • Athens, Florence, and other Mediterranean tourist centers: near the main squares and monuments.

The common thread is a crowded, photo-focused spot where you're distracted and a stranger can get within arm's reach.

The Red Flags

  • A stranger approaches you first, unusually friendly, and quickly closes the distance.
  • They reach for your hand or wrist, or try to hand you something to hold.
  • The word "free" or "gift" is used — right before money is demanded.
  • There's a second person nearby who seems to be with them.

How to Avoid It

Prevention is almost entirely about your hands and your stride. Keep your hands at your sides or in your pockets, don't accept a handshake from a street vendor, and don't let anyone take your hand or place anything in it. Keep walking with a simple, firm "no, thank you" — you don't owe a stranger a conversation. If a bracelet is already on your wrist, you are not obligated to pay for something forced on you: slip it off, hand it back, and walk away without engaging further. Because the scam often travels with a pickpocket, keep your bag worn across your front and a hand on it during any street encounter.

What to Do if You're Targeted

Stay calm and don't escalate. Hand the bracelet back, decline clearly, and move toward a busier, more open area or into a nearby shop if the person follows you. Don't open your wallet to "just pay a little to make it stop" — that's the outcome the scam is engineered to produce. If you're ever physically blocked or feel genuinely threatened, that's no longer a nuisance scam; move to a populated spot and, if needed, contact local police (112 across the EU). If a pickpocket got your wallet or phone in the process, report it for your insurance and cancel any cards immediately. And if a pickpocket did get your wallet or phone, a travel insurance policy arranged before the trip is what reimburses the loss.

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Frequently Asked Questions

It's a forced-gift street scam. A friendly stranger ties or loops a colored string bracelet onto your wrist, calls it a gift, and then demands an inflated payment once it's on you, becoming aggressive if you refuse. It's most common in crowded tourist areas of European cities.
Don't pay. You're not obligated to buy something forced onto you. Slip the bracelet off, hand it back, decline firmly, and keep walking toward a busier area. Avoid opening your wallet, which is exactly what the scam is designed to make you do.
It's rarely violent — it relies on social pressure and awkwardness rather than force. The bigger risk is the pickpocket who often works alongside the bracelet vendor, using the distraction to reach your bag or pocket. Keep your bag in front of you and a hand on it.
It's widespread across European tourist cities. Well-known hotspots include the Spanish Steps and the Vatican area in Rome, the steps below Sacré-Cœur in Paris, and the cathedral and waterfront areas of Barcelona, along with the main squares of Athens and Florence.

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