Remote Equipment Check Scam Warning

Remote Equipment Check Scam Warning is for remote applicants who are being told to deposit a check for equipment. The goal is not to make the process complicated. The goal is to give you a practical system you can use today: what to look for, what to write, what to avoid, and where to link the next step in your job search.

Quick answer:
A real employer should not send a random check and tell you to buy equipment from a specific vendor before you are properly hired.

Use this first

Warning signSafer moveWhy it matters
Too-fast offerVerify the company and domainPressure is a red flag
Money requestDo not pay to get hiredReal employers do not charge you to start
Generic recruiter messageCheck LinkedIn, domain, and job pageIt separates real from fake
Your next actionStop before depositing anything.Start with one clear move instead of trying everything at once

Priority scorecard

Use this simple visual scorecard as a priority guide. It is not official hiring data; it shows where to focus your effort first.

Verification94/100

Always check the source before sharing information.

Pay realism82/100

Unrealistic pay needs extra caution.

Process clarity80/100

Real hiring usually has steps and real people.

Step-by-step plan

  1. Stop before depositing anything.
  2. Verify the employer through official channels.
  3. Do not send money back.
  4. Keep screenshots.
  5. Report or block if it looks fake.

Quick checklist before you move on

  • ☐ Check not deposited
  • ☐ Employer verified
  • ☐ No money sent back
  • ☐ Screenshots saved
  • ☐ Message reported if needed

Copy/paste working template

Before I respond, I will verify:
Company website: [checked / not checked]
Recruiter email domain: [checked / not checked]
Job listed on official career page: [yes / no]
Any money/check/equipment request: [yes / no]
Personal info requested too early: [yes / no]

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Trusting a job just because the pay looks good.
  • Depositing a check from a stranger.
  • Sending personal documents before verifying the employer.

FAQ

Is every remote text message a scam?

No, but unsolicited remote job messages deserve extra checking before you click, pay, or share information.

What is the safest first step?

Go directly to the official company website and search for the role there.

Protect your job search

Before sharing personal information, slow down and verify the company, recruiter email, pay claim, and interview process.