ScamLens
Country Guide

If the case touches South Korea, start with the reporting route that can protect your money, accounts, and evidence fastest

This guide helps you move through South Korea-relevant reporting, bank follow-up, and evidence handling without losing time on the wrong form first.

Quick Answer

Quick answer: if the scam or payment trail is tied to South Korea, stabilize the financial path first, then file through the main official route, and keep every confirmation number you receive.

When this page helps

These are the main places people usually start when the scam path touches South Korea.

  • You live in South Korea, or the scammer used accounts, websites, or payments connected to South Korea
  • You need the shortest path to the main official reporting route for South Korea
  • You want to keep the bank, platform, and authority steps in the right order

What to prepare first

  • Save the timeline, amounts, screenshots, phone numbers, links, and account identifiers
  • If money is still moving, contact the bank, card issuer, exchange, or payment provider first
  • Keep copyable original details, not only screenshots, so you can reuse them across agencies

Move in this order

1

Stop the live loss first

Pause transfers, change credentials, or freeze access before you spend all your time on forms. In South Korea, the money trail often matters more than the first written report.

2

File through the main route next

Open Korean National Police Cyber Bureau with a short timeline, the key identifiers, and the payment details. Keep the confirmation page or reference number.

3

Follow with banks and platforms

Use the report reference when you escalate to banks, cards, exchanges, marketplaces, or telecom providers connected to South Korea.

After you submit

Keep the report reference, screenshots, and receipts in one evidence pack for South Korea-related follow-up

Continue with banks, platforms, card issuers, exchanges, or merchants while the case is still fresh

Watch for second-stage scams promising guaranteed recovery or urgent legal help