TL;DR
- Crypto scams are difficult to recover from: Once the funds are transferred to a external walletrecovery is rarely possible – according to reputable industry estimates Crypto Scam Losses Amount to $17 Billion Last Year Alonewith AI which makes these schemes increasingly difficult to detect.
- Most crypto investment scams follow the same playbook: Fraudsters build trust with friendly or romantic contactintroduce a fake “investment platform” and pressure victims to transfer the crypto from a legitimate exchange — only to demand costs when withdrawals are attempted.
- Protect yourself by pausing, checking, and never paying to withdraw your own funds: Red flags include guaranteed returnspressure to use WhatsApp or telegramrequests for secretAnd apps downloaded outside of official stores – if something goes wrong, get a second opinion before sending anything.
What you need to know before your next transfer
Cryptographic transfers are almost always irreversible. Once funds leave your Kraken account and are transferred to wallets controlled by fraudsters, recovery is often difficult and, in many cases, impossible. Kraken cannot recover funds once they have been transferred to external wallets controlled by third parties.
These risks are real. Reputable crypto industry groups estimate that $17 billion was lost to crypto scams last year. Artificial intelligence makes these scams more convincing and harder to detect. Don’t assume you are immune.
Most crypto investment scams follow a similar pattern. Fraudsters build trust through friendly or romantic conversations, introduce a profitable “investment platform,” and guide victims to purchase cryptocurrency on a legitimate exchange such as Kraken and then transfer it to an external platform.
The platform may display fake profits, but when victims attempt to withdraw funds, they are sometimes asked to send additional payments for taxes, fees, or verification.
Actual investment products do not promise guaranteed profits or unusually high returns. In crypto, legitimate yield opportunities are typically variable and disclosed upfront, with clear information about rates, fees, liquidity and risks before you deposit.
Legitimate products, including those offered by Kraken such as Krak Vaults and DeFi Earn, clearly provide this information before committing funds. Kraken Spectator The experience provides access to curated DeFi strategies while keeping clients in control of their assets.
Before transferring your crypto to a third party, determine if any of the following apply
If so, consider this a signal to pause and reevaluate:
- Did you receive an “accidental” message that led to a crypto investment opportunity?
- Are you building a relationship with someone you’ve never met in person, including romantic contact?
- Are you asked to communicate only via WhatsApp or Telegram instead of official channels?
- Have you been asked to keep this opportunity confidential from friends or family?
- Are you offered guaranteed or risk-free returns?
- Have you been asked to download an app outside of the official app stores?
- Have you been asked to install remote access software?
- Did you receive a small “test” payment to build trust or simulate returns?
Here are some practical ways to protect yourself
- Do not invest with anyone whose identity you cannot independently verify. If you haven’t independently verified the person, don’t send crypto because they recommended a platform or “want to teach you.” Would you invest the same amount of money in a non-crypto project without meeting in person or asking a friend for a second opinion?
- Never pay to withdraw your own money. A request for taxes, fees, or penalties to release your funds is a surefire sign to stop.
- Verify the platforms independently, not through their links. Instead of using links provided by your investment platform, Google the company name yourself, look for regulatory registration if applicable, look for credible third-party coverage and disclaimers, be skeptical of “too new to have reviews” or too good to be real returns or promises.
- Recover and take a break before performing another transfer. Even a 24-hour break breaks the sense of urgency that these scams rely on.
- Get a second opinion. Share the situation with someone you trust and show them the messages. Investment scams thrive in secrecy. If they feel uncomfortable, take that as a sign to stop or do more due diligence.
Are you worried that you may have been the victim of a scam?
- Stop sending funds immediately. Do not send additional payments to “release” funds or recoup losses.
- Save the documentation. Retain messages, wallet addresses, transaction IDs and links. Law enforcement may ask you to provide this information.
- Report the incident. Use your country’s cybercrime reporting channels. In the United States, start with the IC3.
- Notify Kraken Support Team. We can help you with your Kraken account and provide you with advice.


