Students and parents are often told to “never leave free money on the table.” Scammers weaponize that advice by inventing free money that only exists if you pay, rush, and hand over your personal information.
A scholarship or grant scam is a fake aid offer designed to trick students or families into paying fees, disclosing sensitive information, or both. These scams may look official, academic, charitable, or government-connected.
Some claim you already won. Others invite you to apply through a portal that exists only to collect identity details such as your address, school, date of birth, Social Security number, or banking information.
Even when the scammer never gets a fee, they may still be collecting valuable identity data. A “scholarship form” can become a pretext to gather enough information for phishing, account takeover, synthetic identity fraud, or targeted impersonation.
That means the scam is not harmless just because you never paid. If you submitted detailed personal information, you should treat it as a privacy and identity-theft risk.
Real scholarships explain their criteria clearly, give you time to verify them, and do not make you pay to access the award.
Run the message through ScanBeyond before you submit anything sensitive.
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