Non-Delivery Scams: When You Pay But Never Receive
Non-delivery scams occur when fraudsters accept payment for merchandise—physical goods or digital products—with no intention of sending anything to the buyer. The scammer either operates a fake online storefront, hijacks a legitimate seller's account, or lists items on marketplace platforms at artificially low prices to lure victims. After receiving payment via credit card, bank transfer, or untraceable methods like wire transfer or cryptocurrency, the scammer vanishes, leaving the buyer with no product and no recourse. According to the FTC's 2023 Consumer Sentinel report, non-delivery scams accounted for over 30% of all e-commerce fraud complaints, with median losses around $300 per victim, though losses can exceed $1,000 for high-ticket items. These scams are particularly effective because they exploit the convenience of online shopping and the trust consumers place in established payment systems. The scammer's goal is simple: collect as many payments as possible before the account is shut down or law enforcement intervenes, typically operating for 1-4 weeks before disappearing or moving to a new platform.
Common Tactics
- • Creating fake storefronts that mimic legitimate retailers: Scammers register domain names similar to popular brands (like 'amazoon.com' instead of 'amazon.com') or build entire Shopify stores with stolen product images, fake testimonials, and professional-looking layouts designed to pass cursory inspection.
- • Offering unrealistically low prices to create urgency: Displaying luxury items, electronics, or brand-name goods at 50-80% below market price ('Nike shoes for $15,' 'PlayStation 5 for $250') to trigger impulse purchases before buyers research legitimacy.
- • Hijacking established seller accounts on marketplaces: Gaining access to legitimate eBay, Facebook Marketplace, or Amazon seller accounts through credential theft or phishing, then listing items at below-market prices from the compromised account before changing passwords and disappearing.
- • Using fake tracking numbers and shipping confirmations: Sending buyers fabricated tracking numbers that show 'pending' or 'in transit' status indefinitely, creating false reassurance while the scammer already cashes out the payment.
- • Accepting only untraceable payment methods: Requiring payment through wire transfer, cryptocurrency, gift cards, or money transfer apps where transactions cannot be reversed, avoiding credit card processors that offer buyer protection.
- • Operating across multiple platforms simultaneously: Running the same scam on different marketplaces (eBay, Facebook, Instagram, Craigslist) under different seller names to maximize revenue before any single account gets reported and suspended.
How to Identify
- The website or seller account is brand new with little or no history: Check the domain registration date, seller account creation date, or social media account age—scammers typically operate for only weeks, so accounts less than 30 days old with immediate sales offers are red flags.
- Prices are significantly lower than competitors for identical items: Compare pricing across multiple retailers; if a product is 50% or more below market rate, especially for new electronics or luxury goods, the deal is likely fraudulent.
- The seller resists normal payment methods and insists on wire transfer, cryptocurrency, or gift cards: Legitimate retailers accept credit cards and PayPal because these methods are standard; scammers specifically avoid them due to buyer protection features.
- Product images appear to be stolen from legitimate retailers or lack consistent styling: Reverse image search the product photos on Google Images—if the same images appear on multiple unrelated websites or major retailer sites, the scammer is using stolen content.
- Shipping confirmation and tracking information never shows movement or delivery: Legitimate carriers (FedEx, UPS, USPS) update tracking every 24 hours; if tracking remains 'pending' for more than a week or shows a fake tracking number that never activates, delivery won't happen.
- Communication becomes evasive or ceases entirely after payment: When you follow up asking about delays, the seller stops responding to messages, or account access suddenly disappears—this indicates the scammer has moved on to the next round of victims.
How to Protect Yourself
- Research the seller and website before making any purchase: Check domain registration information using WHOIS lookup, read independent reviews on Trustpilot or similar sites, verify business registration, and look for any mention of the seller in scam databases or social media complaints.
- Compare prices across multiple established retailers to verify legitimacy: Use price comparison tools like Google Shopping or CamelCamelCamel to confirm the item is being sold at comparable prices elsewhere; if one source is significantly cheaper, investigate why before assuming it's a legitimate deal.
- Only use payment methods with buyer protection: Pay with credit cards, PayPal Goods & Services, or platform-specific protections (eBay Money Back Guarantee, Amazon A-to-Z Guarantee) that allow chargebacks if items don't arrive; avoid wire transfers, cryptocurrency, and gift cards.
- Verify seller legitimacy through multiple channels: For marketplace sellers, check their seller rating, look at recent buyer reviews specifically mentioning delivery, contact the business directly through official channels to confirm the sale, and verify that the listing matches the seller's normal product categories.
- Use reverse image search to confirm product authenticity: Upload product photos to Google Images, TinEye, or similar tools to verify they haven't been stolen from legitimate retailers or used across multiple scam listings with different seller names.
- Document everything and act quickly if non-delivery occurs: Screenshot all communications, order confirmations, and tracking information immediately; file a dispute with your payment provider within 60 days; report the fraud to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and to the platform where you purchased.
Real-World Examples
A buyer sees a listing for AirPods Pro on Facebook Marketplace for $79 (normally $249) from a seller with a new account and no reviews. The seller's profile photo is generic, and they only accept payment via PayPal Friends & Family or wire transfer. After payment is sent via wire transfer, the seller stops responding to messages. Two weeks later, no tracking number has been provided. When the buyer finally reports the account, it has been deleted. The $79 loss seems minor, but the same scammer had simultaneously victimized over 200 people with similar listings.
A shopper discovers a website called 'bestelectronics-store.com' advertising brand-new iPhone 15 Pro Max phones for $399 (genuine price $999). The site has professional design, accepts PayPal, and shows five-star reviews. The buyer purchases using a credit card, receives an order confirmation, and gets a tracking number that shows 'in transit' for two weeks. After 30 days with no delivery, the buyer realizes the tracking number is fake and the website now shows a 'domain suspended' message. The credit card company's fraud department initiates a chargeback, but the funds are difficult to recover since they've been transferred offshore.
A Craigslist user lists high-end camera equipment at exceptional prices from what appears to be a legitimate used electronics reseller account. The account shows multiple positive past transactions and has been active for several months. A buyer arranges to purchase a $800 Canon camera, sends payment via Venmo, and receives a tracking number via text. The tracking number turns out to be for a completely different package. By the time the buyer realizes the deception and attempts to dispute, the seller account has been modified with a new password and all listings removed. Law enforcement reports suggest the account was hijacked specifically for this scam round.