SCAM CHECK

Is This LinkedIn Recruiter DM A Scam?

Got a LinkedIn DM from a "recruiter" offering an unusually well-paid remote role — interview moves to WhatsApp, then they want you to deposit a check? Same fake-job scam, professional veneer. Here’s the 60-second check.

Updated May 25, 2026 · By SmartOne · 5 min read

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The Short Answer

Yes, This Is Likely A Scam If…

A recruiter contacts you via LinkedIn for a role you didn’t apply to, moves the conversation to WhatsApp or Telegram, won’t do a video interview, and eventually asks you to deposit a check, pay for equipment, or share ID documents up front. Real recruiters use verifiable company channels and video interviews.

Quick Risk Checklist

If any of these match the message you got, treat it as a scam until you’ve verified directly with the real company or agency.

  • The recruiter’s LinkedIn profile is new, has few connections, or vague work history.
  • Within messages, they move the conversation to WhatsApp or Telegram.
  • The company’s LinkedIn page has no real employees, or the company has no real website.
  • Pay is unusually high for the listed role.
  • Interview is text-only or on chat — no video, no real phone.
  • Onboarding requires a check deposit, equipment purchase, or upfront ID/banking share.

What The Scam Looks Like

Here’s the actual wording from a real scam — links are defanged so you can’t accidentally tap them.

From: LinkedIn DM from a "recruiter" with a new-looking profile
Hi! I came across your profile and think you’d be a great fit for a Customer Success Manager role at our remote-first firm. Pay range $90k-$110k, fully remote. Can we move to WhatsApp to schedule a quick chat? My number is +1 555-0144.
(no link, but the move to WhatsApp is the first step)
— Fake "LinkedIn recruiter"

“Defanged” means we replaced the dot in the URL with [.] so it can’t be clicked. Scam URLs stay unclickable on this page on purpose.

What To Do Right Now

If you got this and haven’t tapped anything yet, here’s the order of operations.

  1. Don’t move to WhatsApp or Telegram. Insist on keeping conversation on LinkedIn or moving to a verifiable corporate email.
  2. Look up the company independently — LinkedIn company page, official website, employee count, real funding/news mentions.
  3. Insist on a video interview with a real employee whose LinkedIn profile is established (3+ years, real connections, real posts).
  4. Never deposit checks, pay for equipment, or send ID/banking info upfront. Report scam profiles to LinkedIn directly.

What If You Already…

Don’t panic. Most damage is undoable if you act quickly. Pick the one that applies and follow the recovery steps.

… Deposited A CheckRecovery Steps →
… Bought EquipmentRecovery Steps →
… Sent ID DocumentsRecovery Steps →
… Shared Bank InfoRecovery Steps →
… Shipped A PackageRecovery Steps →
… Moved To WhatsApp / TgRecovery Steps →

Recovery Library is in build. These links go to placeholder pages until those guides ship.

How To Verify A LinkedIn Recruiter Safely

  1. Check the recruiter’s profile age, connections, and post history. Real recruiters have 500+ connections, multi-year history, and a verifiable employer.
  2. Verify the company independently. Type the company name in a search engine — check website, LinkedIn page, employee count, and recent press.
  3. Insist on video interviews with someone whose LinkedIn profile checks out.
  4. Real recruiters use @companyname.com email — not Gmail, not WhatsApp, not Telegram.

Where To Report A LinkedIn Recruiter Scam

Take The 60-Second Scam Check Quiz

Eight quick questions about the message you got. We’ll give you a risk score and what to do next.

Scam Check Quiz

Is This LinkedIn Recruiter DM Scam A Scam?

Answer Yes or No for each. We’ll give you a score and 3 specific next steps.

Common Questions

Are All LinkedIn Recruiter DMs Scams?

No — real recruiters do source candidates via LinkedIn. The pattern that distinguishes scammers: new profile, immediate move off LinkedIn, no video, and onboarding via check-deposit or upfront fees.

Why LinkedIn Specifically?

Because LinkedIn carries a layer of professional trust that other platforms don’t. Real recruiting happens there, so scammers blend in. Also, candidates often have detailed work history posted publicly — perfect for personalized pitches.

What’s The North Korean IT Worker Angle?

Reverse of the usual — North Korean operatives apply FOR remote jobs using stolen identities, get hired, and route their salary back to fund the regime. If you’re a hiring manager, video-verify every remote candidate against their LinkedIn photo before extending an offer.

I Already Sent My ID — What Now?

Assume the docs are used for identity theft. Place a fraud alert with one of the three credit bureaus, file an Identity Theft Affidavit at IdentityTheft.gov, get an IRS Identity Protection PIN at irs.gov/ippin, and freeze your credit.

How Do I Spot A Fake LinkedIn Company Page?

Real companies have multiple verifiable employees, established years, news mentions, and consistent posting. Fake company pages often have only the "recruiter" as an employee, were created in the past few months, and have no posts or external coverage.

Free Download

LinkedIn Recruiter DM Scam Check — Printable Checklist

One-page printable. Stick it on the fridge or save it to your phone.

Download The Checklist (PDF)

Related Guides

Last updated May 25, 2026 · Written by SmartOne · Comments disabled on Scam Check pages

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