indiascammers.com documents scammer profiles, scam phone numbers and emails, robocall and spam sources, scam websites, travel scams, and explainer videos, plus plain-English guides, so anyone can look up a suspicious contact and understand the scam before losing money. It is built for US consumers, and every reporting step below points to United States agencies.
Why this site exists
Scam losses in the United States are not a rounding error anymore, and they keep climbing. Americans reported $20.9 billion in online crime losses to the FBI in 2025, up 26 percent from the year before, and people over 60 lost about $7.7 billion of that. Tech support scams alone took $2.1 billion. A huge share of it traces back to a handful of repeatable scripts run out of overseas call centers. The frustrating truth is that most of these scams fall apart the instant the target recognizes the pattern. That gap, between how preventable these scams are and how much money they still take, is the reason this site exists. The goal is not to scare you. It is to make the scripts boring and obvious, so the next call that tries them on you goes nowhere.
Who this is for
The scams covered here run mostly out of overseas call centers, many based in India, but the victims are Americans getting calls, texts, popups, and emails at home. If you just got a suspicious call claiming to be Microsoft, the IRS, Social Security, Amazon, or your bank, you are in the right place.
How to read the listings
A listing means something was reported, not legally proven. Phone numbers and email addresses get spoofed, reused, and rotated, so a scammer can display a number that belongs to someone entirely innocent. Treat every entry as a reason to verify, never as a verdict on a specific person or business, and always confirm through a number or website you look up yourself.
Where US consumers report a scam
Reporting matters even when no money was lost, because complaints feed the databases agencies and phone carriers use to track operations and block calls. Pick the one that fits your situation.
Many states also run their own consumer fraud reporting through the state attorney general, which can act on local complaints.
If you lost money, move fast
Ask them to stop or reverse the transfer and protect your accounts. Speed is what makes recovery possible.
Report the card as used in a scam and keep the card and receipt. Some funds can still be frozen.
Disconnect it from the internet, change important passwords from a different device, and run a scan or visit a trusted shop.
Report to the FTC and FBI, and hold on to every email, screenshot, and receipt.
Report a scam to this site
Send the scammer name or company they claimed, the phone number, the email address, what happened, and any links or screenshots, and it can be added to the database. Email report@indiascammers.com.
Removal or correction
If a listing is wrong or should be removed, email report@indiascammers.com with the entry and the reason, and it will be reviewed.