Scams arrive by text, email, link, and phone call — and they’re built to look real. These free tools let you check a suspicious message in seconds, right in your browser. Nothing you paste is ever uploaded or stored.
Spam Number Lookup
A call or text from an unknown number? Check the area code and spot robocall and “neighbor spoofing” patterns instantly.
Check a number →
Is This Link Safe?
Paste any URL before you click it. Detects fake look-alike domains, risky extensions, shorteners, and credential traps.
Check a link →
Email Header Analyzer
Is that email really from your bank or PayPal? Check SPF, DKIM, DMARC and sender mismatches to spot spoofing.
Check an email →
WhatsApp Scam Checker
Analyze a suspicious WhatsApp message, email, or sender address for the classic signs of a scam.
Check a message →
Frequently asked questions about scam checks
How can I tell if a phone number is a scam?
Look for area or exchange codes that start with 0 or 1 (impossible for real US numbers), pressure to act immediately, and requests for gift cards or wire transfers. Be wary of “neighbor spoofing,” where a scammer fakes a number that matches your own area code so it looks local. Our Spam Number Lookup flags these for you.
How do I know if a link is safe before clicking?
Check whether the domain is a slight misspelling of a real brand, uses an unusual extension such as .xyz or .top, or hides the destination behind a shortener. Paste it into our link checker first — it never visits the link, so you stay safe.
How can I check if an email is real or fake?
Open the email’s raw header and check its authentication. A genuine message almost always passes SPF, DKIM, and DMARC, and the visible sender matches the real sending domain. A failure or mismatch is a strong sign of spoofing. Our Email Header Analyzer reads the header for you.
Are these tools really private?
Yes. Every tool runs entirely in your browser. What you paste is analyzed on your own device and is never uploaded to a server or stored anywhere.
What should I do if I think I’ve been scammed?
Stop all contact with the sender, don’t send money, and don’t click further links. In the US, report it at reportfraud.ftc.gov, and contact your bank or card issuer right away if you shared financial details.
These tools are provided free of charge, “as is” and “as available,” for general informational purposes only, with no warranties of any kind, express or implied, including accuracy, completeness, reliability, or fitness for a particular purpose. They produce automated estimates only, do not identify the owner of any number, link, email, or account, and are not legal, financial, or security advice. A result of any kind — including a low-risk or “safe” result — is never a guarantee, and the tools may be incorrect, incomplete, out of date, or unavailable. You use them entirely at your own risk and remain solely responsible for your own decisions and actions. To the fullest extent permitted by law, whatsappstatusline.com, its owners and operators accept no liability whatsoever for any loss, damage, or consequence arising from use of, reliance on, errors in, or unavailability of these tools. By using any tool here you confirm you have read, understood, and agreed to these terms; if you do not agree, do not use the tools.
