Fake crypto trading bots are one of the most profitable scams in crypto. Victims lose anywhere from $500 to $500,000. The scammers promise automated trading that generates guaranteed daily returns. In reality, there’s no trading happening — it’s a fake dashboard showing fake profits.
How the Scam Works
- Ad on social media — You see a video of someone showing $10,000 in daily profits from an “AI trading bot”
- Landing page — Professional-looking website with fake testimonials, “verified” profit screenshots, and countdown timers
- Initial deposit — You deposit $250-500 to “test” the bot
- Fake profits — Within hours, your dashboard shows profits (trading never actually happens)
- Reinvestment — The “profits” encourage you to deposit more ($5,000-$50,000+)
- Withdrawal block — When you try to withdraw, you’re hit with “fees,” “taxes,” or “verification requirements”
- Endless fees — Every fee you pay leads to another. The funds are never coming back
Red Flags
- Guaranteed returns — No trading bot guarantees daily profits. Anyone claiming this is lying.
- Fake screenshots — Profit screenshots can be fabricated with browser developer tools or Photoshop.
- Countdown timers — “Deposit $500 within 24 hours to get the premium package” creates false urgency.
- No real trading data — The platform won’t show you actual trade history on a blockchain.
- Anonymous team — No real names, no LinkedIn profiles, no company registration.
- Referral bonuses — Most platforms pay you to recruit others (pyramid scheme structure).
Real Trading Bots vs Fake Ones
| Real Bot (Legitimate) | Fake Bot (Scam) |
|---|---|
| Requires API keys you control | Asks you to deposit crypto directly |
| You manage risk (stop-loss, position size) | Claims no risk, “guaranteed profits” |
| Shows real exchange trade history | Shows fake dashboard numbers |
| May lose money (trading is risky) | Always shows profits (until you withdraw) |
| Charges a fee or subscription | ”Free” but you “need” to deposit to trade |
| Open source or documented | Closed source, no code available |
How to Verify a Trading Bot
- Search for reviews — Add “scam” or “review” to the bot’s name. Use BitcoinTalk, Reddit, and Trustpilot.
- Check the team — Do the creators have real identities? Are they known in the crypto community?
- Test withdrawal — Try withdrawing $1 before depositing more. If it’s blocked, it’s a scam.
- Use a test account — Never connect a real exchange account with significant funds.
- Check API permissions — A legitimate bot only needs “view” and “trade” permissions, not “withdraw.”
Famous Trading Bot Scams
- BitConnect — $2.4B lost (trading bot + lending scam)
- iMarketsLive (IML) — $100M+ lost (fake trading signals and bots)
- MyCoin — $400M lost (fake automated trading)
- Numerous Telegram bots — Hundreds of small-scale bot scams operating daily
Verdict
Legitimate trading bots exist (3Commas, Cryptohopper, HaasOnline), but they don’t guarantee profits. If a bot promises guaranteed daily returns, it’s a scam. The best “bot” for most people is a recurring buy order (DCA) on a reputable exchange.
Related: Crypto Copy Trading Guide | Rug Pulls Explained | How to Spot a Crypto Scam
BitcoinTalk’s Scam Board is full of trading bot scam reports. Search there before depositing into any auto-trading platform.