Reviewed on: 2026-06-19.
Direct answer. If you received a job offer on WhatsApp or Telegram asking you to complete tasks and pay a deposit, it is almost certainly a scam. Call 1930 or visit cybercrime.gov.in immediately. Do not transfer any money. If you already have, report within hours - the faster you act, the better the chance of recovery.
The I4C (Indian Cyber Crime Coordination Centre) under the Ministry of Home Affairs has issued advisories flagging a category of online fraud where scammers pose as employers offering part-time or work-from-home jobs. The following pattern is commonly reported on the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal (NCRP) and is consistent with I4C's April 2025 advisory on fake captcha-filling job fraud:
Stage 1 - The approach.
You receive an unsolicited message on WhatsApp, Telegram, or Instagram. It offers a simple job: liking YouTube videos, filling captchas, clicking product ratings, completing online surveys, or rating hotel listings. The pay sounds modest and believable - enough to seem legitimate.
Stage 2 - The trust-building phase.
You are added to a group or connected with a “team coordinator.” You complete a few small tasks. A small payment arrives in your account. This is real money - it is sent deliberately to lower your guard.
Stage 3 - The prepaid task trap.
Now comes the catch. You are told that higher-paying tasks require a prepaid deposit or a “wallet top-up” to unlock the next batch of work. After you pay, the scammer sends you a “task” result showing a large pending credit - but to withdraw it, you must pay again (tax, verification fee, processing charge). Every time you pay, a larger pending payout appears. The pending amount is fictitious. The scammers disappear once they stop extracting money.
Stage 4 - Overseas job variant.
A separate, documented pattern involves offers of high-paying jobs in South-East Asia (particularly Myanmar and Thailand border areas). Indian citizens are trafficked into compounds and forced to run cybercrime operations. The Embassy of India, Yangon issued an advisory on 31 May 2024 warning specifically about this. If you or someone you know has received such an offer, contact the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) emergency helpline and the nearest Indian Embassy before travelling.
Act within the hour. Delay is the scammer's greatest advantage. Once money moves through multiple mule accounts, recovery becomes harder.
You can also report the scammer's phone number, UPI ID, WhatsApp handle, or website URL using the “Report Suspect” facility at cybercrime.gov.in/Webform/cyber_suspect.aspx. This adds the identifier to I4C's suspect repository so other victims' complaints can be linked.
Recovery is not guaranteed, but it is possible if you report fast. When 1930 receives a complaint, it can alert the destination bank to freeze the account before the scammer withdraws. Banks are obligated to act on such freeze requests. The I4C also works with law enforcement across states through the Joint Cyber Crime Coordination Teams (JCCT) to trace and arrest scammers.
For complaints that are not resolved at the portal level, you can escalate to the State Cyber Cell (see the RTI section below). See also how to seek a fraud money refund for the escalation steps.
If you suspect the website used to recruit you was fake, you can also report the fake website through the same portal.
Yes. Scammers deliberately send a small real payment in the first stage to build your trust. This is a standard tactic. The moment they ask you to pay anything - a deposit, a fee, a wallet top-up - it is a fraud. Stop all contact and report.
Not necessarily. Scammers create fake LinkedIn profiles with stolen photos and manufactured employment histories. Always verify the recruiter's company through the official company website, MCA21 (for Indian companies), or directly calling the company's published number. Legitimate employers do not ask you to pay them.
Possibly, if you report within hours. Call 1930 and your bank immediately. Request a “UPI dispute” on the transaction and ask for the beneficiary account to be flagged. Recovery is harder if the money has already been withdrawn from the destination account, which is why speed matters.
No. No legitimate platform or employer withholds earnings and asks you to pay a tax or release fee before crediting you. This is a recognised modus operandi. Stop paying. Report the scam.
No. You can file a complaint on cybercrime.gov.in anonymously (the portal has an anonymous reporting option). Even if you register and track, your personal details are not published. Reporting is the only way to help stop the scammer from defrauding others.
I4C works with international agencies. File the complaint at cybercrime.gov.in regardless. If you were offered a job in a foreign country and suspect you may be trafficked, contact the MEA's 24×7 helpline at 1800-11-3090 (verify current number on mea.gov.in) and the nearest Indian Embassy before you travel.
Call the Indian Embassy in that country immediately. In Myanmar, contact the Embassy of India, Yangon ([email protected], +95-95419602 on WhatsApp/Viber/Signal). For other countries, find the contact at mea.gov.in. You can also ask someone in India to contact MEA on your behalf.
File an RTI to: the State Cyber Cell (the Public Information Officer of the State Police Cyber Crime unit) and the I4C under the Ministry of Home Affairs
Useful RTI questions:
→ Use our free AI RTI Drafter to generate a complete Section 6(1) application.
Also see digital arrest scam if the scammer has threatened you with arrest or impersonated a police officer or government agency.
By Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak