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The Nexus
Scam alertFederal Trade CommissionMixed audience

Animal lovers: learn to spot and avoid this breed of pet scams

Scammers use stolen or AI-generated pet photos and videos to trick animal lovers into sending money or sharing personal information.

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Published: Jun 24 · 05:00 UTC
How this scam works

You see an ad or post online featuring an adorable pet photo or video. The scammer claims to be selling the animal, offering a rescue, or running a pet charity. They ask you to wire money for adoption fees, shipping, or care costs, or they request your personal details to process a fake transaction.

Red flags to watch for
  • Pet photos look perfect or too polished for a private seller
  • Seller asks for wire transfer, gift cards, or cryptocurrency
  • Story changes or seller becomes evasive when you ask questions
  • Price is unusually low for a purebred or rare animal
  • You cannot find the same pet photo anywhere else online
What to do

Do not send money or personal information to someone you have not verified in person. Reverse-image search any pet photos using Google Images or TinEye to check if they are stolen. If buying from a breeder or rescue, visit in person, ask for references, and use a payment method that offers buyer protection like a credit card.

Scam type
Original advisoryFederal Trade Commission

https://consumer.ftc.gov/consumer-alerts/2026/06/animal-lovers-learn-spot-and-avoid-breed-pet-scams