Recovery Scams: How Scammers Target Victims a Second Time

June 14, 2026
🏷️ scams 🏷️ recovery 🏷️ social-engineering 🔒 security

After losing money to a crypto scam, victims are often targeted again — by the same scammers or by others posing as “recovery specialists.”

These recovery scams are particularly cruel: they exploit victims who are already traumatized by their first loss, desperate to get their money back.

How Recovery Scams Work

You lost money in a crypto scam. You post about it on Reddit, BitcoinTalk, Twitter, or a Facebook group. Soon, you receive messages:

Each of these is a recovery scam. Here’s what actually happens.

Type 1: The Upfront Fee

The “recovery agent” asks for a fee to start the recovery process:

You pay the fee. They disappear. You’ve lost more money.

Type 2: The Percentage

“I’ll recover your funds for 20% of what we recover.”

Sounds reasonable, right? Here’s the trick:

Type 3: The Advanced Fee + More

“I’ve traced your funds to a specific wallet. To freeze it, I need $1,000 for a court order.”

You pay. Then:

Each fee is higher than the last. You keep paying, hoping the next one will finally recover your money. They never do.

Real Recovery (Spoiler: There Is None)

The hard truth about stolen crypto:

The only exception: If the scam involved a centralized exchange and was reported quickly, the exchange may freeze the funds. This is rare and time-sensitive.

Who Is Behind Recovery Scams?

Often, the same scammers who stole your money in the first place.

Here’s the full cycle:

  1. Scammer A runs a fake exchange/wallet/investment scam
  2. You lose money
  3. Scammer B (same person, different account) contacts you as a “recovery specialist”
  4. “I hear you lost money to [scam]. I can help. I’ve successfully recovered funds for others.”
  5. They ask for a fee to “investigate” or “trace” the stolen funds
  6. You pay the fee — and lose more money
  7. If you’re suspicious, they may even send you a screenshot of “recovered funds” that never arrive

Real Recovery Services vs Scams

FeatureLegitimateScam
ContactYou contact themThey DM you first
FeeNo upfront feeUpfront fee required
GuaranteeCannot guarantee recovery”Guaranteed” recovery
ProcessWorks through official channels (police)“Secret methods,” “white-hat hacking”
CommunicationFormal, documentedTelegram/Discord DMs
ProofVerifiable credentialsScreenshots, fake IDs

There are legitimate blockchain forensic firms (Chainalysis, TRM Labs, CipherTrace). But they work with law enforcement and major institutions, not individual victims. An individual reaching out to you on Telegram is not from Chainalysis.

What to Do If You’ve Been Scammed

1. Accept the Loss (Hard but Necessary)

The money is likely gone. Every additional dollar you spend trying to recover it is another dollar lost. Acceptance is the first step to stopping the bleeding.

2. Report It (For Records, Not Recovery)

These reports rarely lead to recovery, but they help authorities track patterns and may help future victims.

3. Warn Others

This prevents others from falling for the same scam and warns them about recovery scammers.

4. Secure Your Remaining Crypto

5. Ignore All Recovery Offers

The Emotional Reality

Crypto scam victims don’t just lose money — they experience:

Remember: Scammers are professionals. They have scripts, fake websites, fake testimonials, and years of practice manipulating people. Falling for a scam doesn’t make you stupid — it makes you human.

Verdict

Recovery scams add insult to injury. After losing money to a crypto scam, the same criminals come back to take more.

The rule: if someone contacts you offering to recover stolen crypto, it’s a scam. Full stop. No exceptions.

Your best course of action: accept the loss, report it, warn others, secure your remaining funds, guard your heart, and move forward.

Related: How to Spot a Crypto Scam | Common Phishing Attacks | How to Spot a Fake Exchange | Fake Crypto Airdrops

Recovery scam warnings are a permanent sticky on BitcoinTalk’s Scam board. The first reply to any “I’ve been scammed” post is always: “You will now receive recovery scam messages. Ignore them all.”

📚 Found this helpful? Share it with someone who's new to crypto. This question was sourced from BitcoinTalk community discussions.
This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.