is that a scam?
HIGH lottery

Is “foreign lottery scam” a scam?

Yes — this is a known, dangerous scam.

A call, letter, or email says you've won a sweepstakes, lottery, or sweepstake from Publishers Clearing House, Reader's Digest, or a foreign lottery. To claim the prize, you must first pay shipping, processing fees, taxes, or "insurance" — often by gift card or wire transfer.

How to tell

  • You did not enter the sweepstakes / lottery they say you won
  • Real prizes never require you to pay taxes or fees upfront — taxes come later, separately, to the IRS
  • Prize value is huge ($100,000+) and out of proportion to anything believable
  • Payment of fees is requested by gift card, wire transfer, or cryptocurrency — never by check

What to do right now

  1. 1 It is illegal in the US to play a foreign lottery by mail or phone — and most calls about them are scams regardless
  2. 2 Publishers Clearing House does NOT call winners by phone. They show up in person, with the winning notification crew. There is no fee
  3. 3 Stop sending money. Each new 'one more fee' is the scam's pattern. There is no prize
  4. 4 If you have sent money, dispute the gift cards / wire with the issuer and your bank immediately
  5. 5 Report to the FTC at https://reportfraud.ftc.gov and the FBI's IC3 at https://www.ic3.gov.

Full guidance, red flags, variants & official sources

You've won! Just pay the shipping or tax to claim your prize →