How to Spot a Fake Crypto Exchange Before You Deposit

June 14, 2026
🏷️ exchanges 🏷️ scams 🔒 security 🏷️ fake

Fake crypto exchanges are professionally designed websites that look exactly like real exchanges. They steal your deposit and disappear.

Thousands of people lose money to fake exchanges every year. The sites look convincing — real-time price charts, professional UI, fake trading volume, even mobile apps. But when you try to withdraw, there’s always a “problem” requiring more deposits.

Here’s how to spot them before you lose money.

Red Flag #1: The URL

Fake exchanges use domain names that look like real ones.

Fake URLReal Exchange
binance-secure.combinance.com
coinbasepro-login.comcoinbase.com
kraken-wallet.comkraken.com
bybit-exchange.netbybit.com
app-uniswap.financeuniswap.org

What to do: Check the domain carefully. Hover over links before clicking. Bookmark exchange URLs in your browser.

Red Flag #2: “Best Exchange” Google Ads

Scammers buy Google ads for search terms like “best crypto exchange” or “Binance login.” Their fake site appears at the top of search results above the real site.

What to do: Never click Google ads for exchanges. Scroll past the ads and find the organic result. Or use bookmarks.

Red Flag #3: Unrealistic Promotions

Fake exchanges lure victims with offers that real exchanges never give:

Real exchanges offer: 0.1-0.5% trading fees. Small signup bonuses ($10-50). Withdrawal limits for security.

Red Flag #4: No License or Fake License

Real exchanges are registered with financial regulators. Fake exchanges either have no license or display fake license numbers.

What to check:

Red Flag #5: No Withdrawal Without Fees

This is the most common trap. You deposit money and trade profitably. But when you try to withdraw:

Real exchanges: Charge small flat fees for withdrawals. No hidden fees before withdrawing.

How to Verify an Exchange

Step 1: Check the domain age

Use a Whois lookup tool. If the domain was registered within the last 6 months, be extremely suspicious.

Real Coinbase: Registered 2012 Real Binance: Registered 2017 Real Kraken: Registered 2011

Step 2: Check registration documents

Step 3: Search for the exchange name + “scam”

Before depositing, Google:

If you find multiple posts about withdrawal issues, walk away.

Step 4: Check trading volume

Use CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap. Real exchanges have real trading volume. Fake exchanges show inflated or fake volume.

Suspicious signs:

Step 5: Test withdrawal

Deposit a tiny amount ($10-20). Try to withdraw immediately. If there’s any issue withdrawing such a small amount, don’t deposit more.

Quick Verification Table

CheckSafeSuspicious
Domain age3+ yearsLess than 1 year
Google resultsMostly positive”Scam” pages
Regulatory licenseVerifiedNone or unverifiable
Social mediaActive, real communityFew followers, bots
Withdrawal testWorks immediately”Fees” required
CoinGecko listingYesNo
VolumeRealisticInflated or fake
TeamKnown, doxxedAnonymous

Safest Exchanges

If you’re not sure, use only these major exchanges:

What to Do If You Deposited on a Fake Exchange

  1. Stop depositing immediately — Every additional deposit is also lost
  2. Don’t pay “withdrawal fees” — They’ll ask for more fees afterward
  3. Report the site — File a report with:
    • Your local financial regulator
    • Action Fraud (UK)
    • IC3 (FBI)
    • Your bank (if you deposited via bank transfer)
  4. Accept the loss — Most fake exchange deposits are never recovered
  5. Warn others — Post about the scam on BitcoinTalk or Reddit

Verdict

Fake exchanges are everywhere. They look real. They feel real. They steal your money the moment you deposit.

The only defense is verification: check the domain age, search for scam reports, verify the license, and test with a tiny deposit before trusting an exchange with significant funds.

If in doubt, stick with Coinbase, Kraken, or Binance. If you haven’t heard of an exchange, you have no reason to trust it with your money.

Related: Best Crypto Exchange for Beginners | What Happens If an Exchange Collapses? | Centralized vs Decentralized Exchanges | Common Phishing Attacks

Fake exchange reports are a weekly occurrence on BitcoinTalk. The community rule: “If you found it on Google Ads, it’s probably a scam.”

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This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.