Fake invoice email
An email says a payment is due and includes a link or phone number to cancel.
AI Scam Detector guide
Use Scamnova as a simple email scam checker for suspicious emails. Paste suspicious content and get a trust score, red flags and safe recommendations before you click, reply, pay or trust.
Example: An email claims your payment failed and asks you to sign in through a link that does not match the official website.
Scamnova guide
Suspicious emails can look normal at first glance. Scammers often copy the tone, branding and layout of real companies because they want people to trust before verifying. A calm second opinion helps you slow down, compare the warning signs and avoid decisions made under pressure.
Scamnova is built for workers, small business owners, shoppers, job seekers and families who receive unexpected email requests. The goal is not to overwhelm you with technical cybersecurity language. The goal is to explain risk in plain English: what looks suspicious, what you should avoid, and what safer action you can take next.
Common risks include fake invoices, phishing links, spoofed company names, account threats and attachments designed to steal information. These signs do not always prove something is a scam, but they are strong reasons to pause and verify through official sources you type yourself.
This guide is especially useful for people who want practical, non-technical help before trusting suspicious emails.
These examples are educational scenarios, not copied scam messages. They show the kinds of situations where a second opinion can help.
Scamnova Recommendation
If you are unsure whether something is safe, paste the message, link, offer, listing or screenshot text into Scamnova before you click, reply, pay or share personal information.
Analyze for FreeIf an email sends you to a suspicious site, use the Website Scam Checker. If the email mentions PayPal, compare it with the PayPal Invoice Scam Checker.
Scamnova reviews the content you paste and turns confusing warning signs into a simple report. You receive a risk level, a trust score out of 100, red flags, emotional manipulation notes, what not to do, safe next steps and a suggested safe reply. This makes the product useful for normal people who do not want to study cybersecurity before making a decision.
For example, if an email claims your payment failed and asks you to sign in through a link that does not match the official website., Scamnova would look for pressure, impersonation, unusual payment requests, suspicious wording and dangerous next steps. Instead of saying only that something is "phishing," the report explains what that means in simple language and tells you how to verify safely.
Use the scanner before clicking a link, calling a phone number from a message, sending money, replying to a stranger, sharing codes, opening attachments or trusting an unfamiliar website. The safest habit is simple: check before you trust.
Use this page whenever something online makes you pause. Many scam victims do not lose money because they are careless. They lose money because the message arrives at the right time, looks familiar, and creates pressure. A fake delivery message may arrive while you are waiting for a package. A fake bank alert may arrive after a real purchase. A fake job offer may arrive while you are actively applying for work. That timing makes the content feel believable.
A good email scam checker should help you slow down without making the situation feel complicated. You do not need to know how domains, email headers, malware, phishing kits or spoofing work. You only need a clear explanation of the warning signs and a safe way to respond. Scamnova focuses on that practical decision moment.
If a message asks you to move money, share information, open a link, scan a code, download a file, call a phone number, or reply quickly, treat that as a reason to check first. Even if the message is real, a short verification step is safer than trusting under pressure.
Modern scams are often built around familiar brands, common routines and emotional pressure. A scammer may pretend to be a bank, Amazon, PayPal, a delivery company, a recruiter, a romantic partner, a support agent, a landlord, a buyer, a seller or even a family member. The message does not need to be perfect. It only needs to feel believable long enough for the person to click, pay or reply.
Scammers also use simple emotional triggers. Fear makes people worry that an account will be closed. Urgency makes people act before thinking. Greed makes an offer feel exciting. Guilt makes someone feel responsible for helping. Confusion makes a fake support number feel useful. Scamnova highlights these manipulation patterns in plain language so you can step back from the pressure.
For suspicious emails, the most important question is not "Can this look real?" The better question is "What is this asking me to do, and what could go wrong if I trust it?" That question helps you focus on risk instead of appearance.
Do not use contact details from the suspicious message itself. If a message claims to be from a bank, open the bank app or type the bank website yourself. If it claims to be from PayPal or Amazon, go directly to your account through the official app or website. If it claims to be a job offer, verify the company domain, recruiter identity and hiring process. If it claims to be an investment opportunity, assume that guaranteed returns and rushed deposits are major warning signs.
For families, Scamnova can become a shared safety habit. A parent can check a suspicious SMS before clicking. An adult child can help a senior review a bank warning. A job seeker can paste an offer before sending personal information. A small business owner can check a strange invoice before paying. The product is designed so a non-technical user can understand the result without needing a cybersecurity background.
Paid plans are useful when checking becomes part of everyday life. If you shop online often, apply for jobs, receive invoices, use marketplaces, manage family accounts or help older relatives, unlimited checks can be more valuable than waiting until something feels extremely dangerous. The subscription is not just for more features. It is for the peace of mind of checking important decisions before money or identity is at risk.
The AI report is designed around human decisions. It looks for urgency, fear tactics, fake support wording, suspicious links, impersonation, requests for gift cards or crypto, requests for one-time passwords, fake payment confirmations, unrealistic offers, emotional manipulation and signs that someone is trying to move the conversation away from normal protection.
The trust score gives a quick signal, but the explanation is what matters most. A high-risk result tells you why the content is suspicious and what not to do next. A medium-risk result helps you verify carefully before continuing. A low-risk result still reminds you to avoid sharing sensitive information and to use official sources. This balanced approach is important because no AI system can promise perfect scam detection.
Scamnova is strongest when you paste the full suspicious message, the visible link, the sender wording and any surrounding context that is safe to share. Do not paste passwords, card numbers, Social Security numbers or verification codes. The tool is built to help you make safer decisions without collecting unnecessary sensitive details.
Open the official website by typing the address yourself. Contact the company through a known support channel. Ask a family member or trusted person before sending money. Save screenshots and messages if you need to report the scam. If money or identity information was already shared, contact the bank, payment provider or relevant official organization immediately.
Scamnova does not replace professional cybersecurity, legal or financial advice, but it gives a fast and practical first layer of protection for everyday decisions. That first pause can be the difference between a harmless close call and an expensive mistake.
Check a suspicious website before you trust it.
Check a suspicious text before you reply.
Check a suspicious link before you open it.
Check a job offer before you respond.
Check a crypto offer before you send money.
Check a romance message before you send money.
Check a marketplace message before you act.
Check a PayPal invoice before you call or click.
Check an Amazon message before you click.
Look at the sender address, link destination, urgency, attachments, grammar, and whether the email asks for payment or login details.
Yes. Sender names can be spoofed or made to look similar to real companies. Check the full email address and request.
Avoid clicking unexpected email links. Go directly to the official website or app instead.
They can be. Fake invoices often use urgency, fake support numbers, or links to trick people into paying or logging in.
Do not open them until you verify the sender through a trusted channel.
Yes. It can review suspicious invoice, support, shipping, and account-warning emails in plain English.
A email scam checker helps you review suspicious emails for scam warning signs before you click, reply, pay or share personal information.
Scamnova looks for urgency, impersonation, suspicious links, payment pressure, unrealistic promises, emotional manipulation and plain-English safety concerns.
No scam checker can guarantee perfect detection. Scamnova gives AI-based guidance so you can slow down, verify through official sources and make a safer decision.
No. Do not paste passwords, payment card numbers, Social Security numbers or verification codes into any scam checker.
Pro is useful when you regularly check suspicious websites, messages, emails, job offers or payment requests and want unlimited checks before important decisions.
Know before you trust
Paste the message, URL, email, listing or offer into Scamnova and get a plain-English trust report in seconds.