Crypto job offer scams target people looking for remote work in the crypto industry. The scammer poses as a recruiter for a crypto company, conducts fake interviews, and eventually asks you to pay for “training,” “equipment,” or “verification” — or tricks you into installing malware.
How the Scam Works
Version 1: The Upfront Fee
- You apply for a remote crypto job on LinkedIn, Indeed, or a crypto job board
- “Interview” is done via Telegram or WhatsApp text chat (no video call)
- You’re “hired” within hours — too fast for a legitimate process
- They ask for a fee for:
- “Background check” ($50-200)
- “Equipment deposit” ($200-1,000)
- “Training materials” ($100-500)
- “Crypto wallet verification” (send small amount to “verify”)
- You pay the fee and never hear from them again
Version 2: The Malware Install
- You apply and get “hired” for a crypto trading or analysis role
- The “company” sends you software to install for “trading” or “monitoring”
- The software is malware that steals your crypto wallets, passwords, and exchange logins
- You’re asked to “test the platform with your own wallet”
- Your funds are stolen
Version 3: The Fake Exchange Job
- The scammer offers you a “customer support” or “compliance” role at a real exchange
- They send you a link to a “company portal” that requires your crypto wallet to “receive salary”
- The “portal” is a wallet drainer that steals your connected wallet
Red Flags
- Interview via text only — No video call, no phone call
- Hired immediately — Legitimate companies have multi-stage interviews
- Upfront fees — No legitimate employer asks you to pay for training, equipment, or background checks
- Company doesn’t exist — Search the company name + “scam” on Google
- Recruiter has no LinkedIn presence — Few connections, no history
- Asks you to install software — Especially crypto-related software from an untrusted source
- Pay in crypto — Legitimate companies pay salary through traditional payroll
How to Verify a Crypto Job Offer
- Check the company website — Does the company exist? Is the domain legitimate?
- Check LinkedIn — Do real employees work there? Does the recruiter have a real profile?
- Search the company name + “scam” — If victims have posted, you’ll find them
- Demand a video call — Legitimate companies always do video interviews
- Never pay to work — No legitimate job requires upfront payment
- Verify the recruiter — Contact the company through their official website to confirm the job exists
Legitimate Crypto Job Platforms
| Platform | Legitimate |
|---|---|
| CryptoJobs.com | Yes (vetted listings) |
| CryptoJobster | Yes |
| LinkedIn (verified companies) | Yes |
| Upwork/Freelancer (with caution) | Mixed |
| Telegram groups | Mostly scams |
| Discord job boards | Mostly scams |
Verdict
Legitimate crypto companies hire like any other tech company — multiple interview rounds, video calls, competitive salaries, and no upfront fees. If a “job offer” involves paying money, installing software from a link, or communicating only via text chat, it’s a scam.
Related: Pig Butchering Scams | Crypto Malware | Fake Customer Support Scams