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How to protect yourself from job scams

What are job scams?

Job scams usually take the form of a posting or job offer that appears legitimate at the surface but is intended to swindle the applicant out of their money, identity, time, or all of the above.

Opportunities that seem too good to be true usually are. Scammers will often offer large sums of money for little to no effort or experience to lure their victims in. While those are the most common, there are more sophisticated scams out there that can mislead applicants into providing this information without realizing until it鈥檚 too late.

Common job scams

Moving money 

A scammer might ask you to deposit a cheque and e-transfer money back to 鈥渢est their payroll.鈥 The cheque will bounce, so you鈥檝e lost your own money and ca苍鈥檛 recover it. These scams will often use terms like 鈥渇inancial agent鈥 or 鈥減ayment processor.鈥 Or, scammers will ask you for your bank or credit card details for 鈥渉iring purposes,鈥 before they鈥檝e even set up an interview or offered the job.

Phishing for personal information 

Perhaps a recruiter wants to set up an interview. But first, they ask you to fill out an online form and provide your full name, SIN, home address, a scan of your passport, and banking information so they can create a profile for you. While your name might be necessary, the other information is苍鈥檛.

If an employer is asking for your social insurance number, your passport/visa information, bank details or more very early in the process, take extra precaution and do some research to confirm that it鈥檚 legitimate.

Paying for training or materials upfront 

If a company is promising 鈥渦nlimited earning potential鈥 and asking you to pre-purchase the products you鈥檙e selling, or providing lengthy unpaid training, beware! Other common scams that involve paying for materials or products now might also require you to recruit others.

Career Clip

Watch this short video below for tips on how you can spot a scam, and what you can do to stay safe.

External resources

  • from 草莓污视频导航 IT
  • from the Government of Canada Competition Bureau
  • Article:

Things to watch out for


Vague job details

Very little or confusing information about the job is provided and no skills or experience is required.

Suspiciously high pay

Highly paid jobs require a lot of expertise, diligence, and dedication. While it鈥檚 important to find a job that pays you well, if the salary seems disproportionately high for the type of work you鈥檒l be doing, or your skills and experiences, then it may be a scam.

Unsolicited offers

Someone is offering you a job that you never applied for, especially via email or text message. Legitimate recruiters have been known to headhunt using social media, email or LinkedIn, but they will often provide more detail and interview you before hiring.

No interviews

Most reputable companies will interview you first before offering you a job. If you were offered a position before you provided a resume, references, had an interview or met in person, do more research.

Unprofessional communication

If you received a job offer from a messaging app like WhatsApp, WeChat, or Messenger when 鈥渞ecruiting,鈥 do some research before accepting or providing any information.

You should also beware if the job posting or communications you received from the supposed employer have many spelling or grammatical errors, slang, or are poorly written or translated.

Suspicious contact information

While it鈥檚 not uncommon to use Yahoo, Gmail, Hotmail or other free email providers, most employers will also use a corporate email address to contact you.

Always double-check the email address, as some scammers can create a fake corporate email address thats similar to a legitimate company鈥檚 name, but with a minor detail changed.

Extra costs or fees

Scams might involve paying an upfront fee for 鈥渢raining鈥 or 鈥渟oftware鈥 or buying the products before you sell them. Typically, candidates are苍鈥檛 required to pay any costs for the job they are being offered. If you're being asked to send money or pay fees as a condition of the job, stop and do some research first.

Requesting sensitive information

Identity theft is an extremely common motive for scammers. Don't provide your SIN or direct deposit information until you are absolutely sure the job offer is legitimate, and you have met the employer, interviewed for the position and signed a formal offer.

How can I protect myself?

Research the job and company

Doing extra research never hurts. Look up the company or company representative online or on LinkedIn and check out the company website whenever possible. Does their address, contact information and history check out? Is this job posted anywhere on their official channels?

Know where to go for help

The career development specialists at Career Services are always happy to help you identify this a job is legitimate or not. If a job opportunity or offer doesn't feel right, email us at csstdnt@ucalgary.ca for help. You can also book an appointment on or visit during drop-in hours.

Every job posting on Elevate is vetted thoroughly to ensure that it鈥檚 accurate and comes from a reputable company. 

Additionally, the has a list of reported scams and provides resources if you think you鈥檝e been scammed and need help. You can also refer to other consumer organizations like the Better Business Bureau.