Inheritance Scam: How to Identify Fake Claims
Inheritance scams are advance-fee frauds that exploit people's hopes of unexpected windfalls and emotional vulnerabilities. Scammers contact victims claiming they've inherited money from a distant relative, an unclaimed estate, or a deceased person with a matching surname. The victim is told they must pay upfront fees for legal processing, taxes, or fund transfers before receiving their supposed inheritance—amounts ranging from $50,000 to $5 million. According to the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3), inheritance scams resulted in over $86 million in losses in 2023, with victims averaging $10,000 in losses per case. The scam typically unfolds over 2-8 weeks as scammers build trust through persistent communication and create artificial urgency by claiming inheritance funds will expire or be transferred to the government. These scams are particularly dangerous because they manipulate fundamental psychological triggers: the excitement of unexpected money, the perceived legitimacy of official-sounding communications, and the natural human tendency to trust authority figures like lawyers or bankers. Victims often remain engaged because they receive official-looking documents, communications from fake law firms with convincing websites, and confirmation that their inheritance is 'real'—just pending final processing. The scammers are patient, sometimes maintaining contact for weeks to establish credibility before requesting the first payment. Once a victim pays the initial fee, scammers typically request additional payments for 'unexpected taxes,' 'insurance,' or 'processing delays,' maximizing losses before disappearing entirely.
Common Tactics
- • Contact victims through email, phone, or postal mail claiming an inheritance from an unknown relative or unclaimed estate that matches their surname or was identified through database searches.
- • Create forged legal documents from fake law firms complete with official letterheads, bar association numbers, and convincing websites to establish legitimacy and urgency.
- • Request upfront payments for 'processing fees,' 'legal costs,' 'tax payments,' or 'fund transfer expenses'—typically $500 to $5,000 for the initial payment to unlock the inheritance.
- • Respond to initial skepticism by offering to deduct the advance fees from the final inheritance payment and providing increasingly elaborate false documentation to appear legitimate.
- • Use named accomplices posing as lawyers, bankers, or government officials to reinforce legitimacy through phone calls and follow-up communications with victim.
- • Escalate requests after initial payment by claiming unexpected complications requiring additional fees for taxes, insurance verifications, or international transfer requirements.
How to Identify
- You receive unsolicited contact about an inheritance you never knew about, often from a relative with a generic surname match or an unfamiliar estate.
- The alleged inheritance amount is substantial (often $50,000 to $5 million), creating excitement that overrides natural skepticism.
- Communications come from email addresses or phone numbers that look official but are slightly off (like lawyer-legal-services.co instead of legitimate firm domain).
- You're asked to pay upfront fees before receiving any funds, with assurances these will be deducted from your final inheritance payout.
- Official-looking documents arrive, but when you independently verify the law firm or bank, they claim no knowledge of the inheritance or your case.
- Scammers create artificial urgency by claiming the inheritance will expire, be transferred to government, or require immediate action to release funds.
How to Protect Yourself
- Never accept unsolicited notifications about inheritances. Contact your closest relatives directly or hire a legitimate probate attorney to verify if any estate involves you.
- Independently verify any law firm or financial institution by looking up their phone number in official bar association directories or bank registries—do not use contact information provided by the scammer.
- Never send money upfront for inheritance claims. Legitimate estates pay real lawyers from the estate itself; they never demand prepayment from beneficiaries.
- Check if an inheritance is real by contacting the state probate court in the jurisdiction where the supposed deceased lived, as all legitimate probate proceedings are public record.
- Be suspicious of pressure tactics and artificial deadlines. Request all communications in writing and take time to verify details before responding to requests for money.
- Report suspected inheritance scams to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, your local law enforcement, and the FBI's IC3 at ic3.gov, providing all communications from the scammer.
Real-World Examples
A 58-year-old woman receives an email from 'Johnson & Associates Law Firm' stating she's inherited $850,000 from a distant relative named James Johnson. She's asked to pay $2,400 for legal processing and tax clearance. After paying via wire transfer, the 'law firm' claims additional inheritance tax complications require another $5,000. When she attempts to verify with the state bar association, she learns the firm doesn't exist. She has lost $7,400 and receives no further contact.
A 72-year-old man receives a certified letter claiming he's a beneficiary of a $2.3 million unclaimed estate from an overseas relative. Official-looking court documents are included. He's instructed to send $1,800 to a bank account for 'international fund transfer fees.' After sending the money, he receives phone calls from someone claiming to be his assigned estate attorney, requesting another $3,200 for 'tax verification.' When he asks for the attorney's bar association number and independently looks it up, it's discovered to be fake.
A 45-year-old woman receives multiple emails over three weeks from a 'financial trustee' explaining she's inherited $500,000 from an estate. Documents appear official and include case numbers. She wires $1,200 for the initial processing fee. Days later, the scammer contacts her claiming the inheritance transfer is blocked pending $2,500 for insurance verification. After sending a second payment, all communication ceases and she realizes she's been defrauded of $3,700.