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Online "friend" says they sent you gold or dollars — fake customs officials demand clearance fees

A foreign contact built over weeks on Facebook or WhatsApp announces they've sent an expensive gift. Fake customs officers then call demanding duty, GST, or clearance fees to release the parcel. The gift never exists. A Karnataka woman lost ₹28.95 lakh this way.

Also known as: customs clearance scam, foreign gift parcel fraud, fake customs duty fraud, dollar box scam, Facebook foreign friend customs scam

What to do right now

  1. 1 Stop all payments immediately — no legitimate customs process works this way
  2. 2 Do not travel to any airport to collect a parcel at the scammer's instruction
  3. 3 Verify: genuine CBIC customs payments go through official channels (ICEGATE), never to personal UPI accounts
  4. 4 Block the 'online friend' — they are part of the fraud network, not an innocent third party
  5. 5 Keep all chat records, call logs, and bank transaction receipts as evidence
  6. 6 Report at https://cybercrime.gov.in or call 1930 (national cyber helpline).

Red flags

  • Online contact you've never met in person volunteers to send expensive gifts — gold, dollars, jewelry, electronics
  • A 'customs officer' then calls or messages asking for duty, GST, or verification fees to release the package
  • Indian Customs never contacts the public via phone, WhatsApp, or SMS to collect duty into private accounts
  • Each payment triggers a new reason for another fee — there are always more charges before the gift arrives
  • The gift never materialises no matter how much is paid — an infinite fee loop
  • The online friend and the customs officer may coordinate to add pressure — both are controlled by the same fraud network

Known variants

  • Dollar box variant: fraudster posing as a foreign contact (doctor, engineer, or widow with inheritance) claims to be sending a box containing foreign currency and gold. Customs 'officials' intercept and demand ₹30,000–₹2 lakh in clearance fees. Patna man lost ₹40.44 lakh to woman posing as Indonesian contact.

    Last seen: 7/11/2026

  • Matrimonial site NRI gift variant (I4C advisory July 2026): scammer poses as a wealthy NRI groom or bride on Shaadi.com, Jeevansathi, or BharatMatrimony; after building trust over weeks promises to send an expensive gift (car, jewelry, foreign currency) from abroad; fake customs officers demand ₹1–5 lakh in clearance fees that never end.

    Last seen: 7/11/2026

Sources

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