Start from the official channel
Open the app or website yourself and verify the notice there before you act.
Start with the clue you already have, then move into verification, reporting, or recovery.
Check domains, web pages, and impersonation risk.
Use this for invoices, restriction emails, and fake support messages.
Use this for Telegram, WhatsApp, and investment groups.
Check community reports and impersonation patterns.
Start here for on-chain transfers, wallet addresses, and contracts.
Move directly into the victim action plan and next steps.
Check whether a site looks safe before you visit, pay, or sign in
Check wallets and token contracts before you send or approve crypto
Check if a token is a honeypot or rug pull
Check suspicious calls before you call back, share codes, or move money
Verify who you are dealing with before you sign, pay, or share documents
Detect lookalike address scams
AI wallet profiling & risk analysis
Check whether a suspicious email is pushing you into a fake login, payment, or callback
Check chats and DMs for scam pressure, fake support, or investment pitches
Browse flagged domains and addresses
See important scam cases, warnings, and records in one place
Interpol, FBI, OFAC wanted and sanctioned entities
Read scam takedowns, arrests, and new tactics that may match your case
Known scam compound locations worldwide
Search names, companies, domains, wallets, and sanctioned entities in one place
Get a plain-language roundup of major scam cases and warning trends
Open suspicious links safely and reveal hidden redirects before you continue
Report a suspicious website and preserve the evidence for others
Report a suspicious wallet, address, or crypto payment path
Get a step-by-step action plan if you already paid, replied, or shared data
Generate a freeze request if your USDT was stolen
These cases usually start with urgency and then push you toward codes, transfers, wallet connections, callbacks, or stand-alone pages.
Quick Answer
Quick answer: if the PayPal invoice email asks you to leave the official app or site, share codes, connect a wallet, or call back a number you did not verify yourself, treat it as high risk.
People open this page when they need a fast answer about whether a PayPal invoice email is real and what to do next.
Most people reach this page at a live decision point: should I click, transfer, reply, or call back? Go back to the official site or account you control first, then inspect the domain and money path.
Open the app or website yourself and verify the notice there before you act.
Inspect the domain, callback number, or page source before you reply, pay, or connect anything.
If you already clicked, replied, signed, or paid, keep the full timeline and receipts now.
These pages cover similar scam stories and help when you are still deciding whether to continue.
Email Review
Check whether a PayPal support email is real before you click, reply, sign in, connect, or pay.
Email Review
Check whether a PayPal account restricted notice is real before you click, reply, sign in, connect, or pay.
Email Review
Check whether a PayPal security alert email is real before you click, reply, sign in, connect, or pay.
Text Review
Check whether a PayPal refund text is real before you click, reply, sign in, connect, or pay.