Before pasting, remove your own details — real name, account numbers, addresses. The analysis doesn't need them.

A straight answer, not a guarantee

The analyzer is good at spotting the patterns scammers rely on — manufactured urgency, mismatched links, impersonated brands, requests that real companies never make. But scams are designed to look legitimate, and some succeed. If a message involves money or account access, verify through a channel you already trust: the phone number on the back of your card, the official app, or typing the company's address into your browser yourself. Never the link or number in the message.