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A fake crypto exchange is a scam built to look like a real platform while actually stealing your money. Below you will find 7 red flags, how to verify an exchange through MASAK/SPK, common fraud types, the "I can't withdraw" trap, what to do step by step if you have been scammed, and the rules for protecting yourself. What follows is not investment advice but a protection guide.
What Is a Fake Crypto Exchange and Why Is It Dangerous?
A fake crypto exchange is a fraud system that looks like a real cryptocurrency trading platform but is actually set up to steal people's money. It usually appears as a professional-looking website or app; it closely resembles real exchanges, and sometimes even imitates the name and logo of a well-known exchange (a clone site).
Here is how it works: it convinces you to deposit money with high profit promises, shows fake "profits" in your account (it looks like money is growing on screen, but it is not real), then blocks you when you want to withdraw; it asks you to pay an extra "tax", "commission" or "penalty" and finally disappears with all your money. It is dangerous because losses are usually large, very hard to recover, and the scammers often operate from abroad and anonymously. So before depositing money into an exchange, understanding whether it is real is extremely important.
The 7 Red Flags of a Fake Exchange
As a digital marketer, I see up close how convincingly fake crypto ads are designed. If even one of the red flags below is present, be very careful:
- Unrealistic returns: promises like "guaranteed profit", "X percent daily gain", "double your money". Real investment has no guaranteed profit.
- Pressure and urgency: language that pushes you to act without thinking, like "deposit now, the chance is slipping", "last X hours".
- Blocked withdrawals: depositing is easy but, when you try to withdraw, constant obstacles or extra payments appear (the strongest sign).
- No license: regulatory registration or license information is missing or cannot be verified.
- Clone or fake address: the address closely resembles a well-known exchange but has small differences; it reaches you via an email or ad link.
- Strange communication: an "advisor" or "tip" given over WhatsApp or Telegram.
- Fake reviews and reputation: exaggerated, identical positive comments; claims of celebrity or "approved" status.
If the signs add up, do not deposit money. A real platform never rushes you and never blocks you from withdrawing your money.
How Do You Verify a Reliable Exchange? (MASAK/SPK)
Giving you a single "most reliable exchange" name would not be right; that becomes product advice and varies by person. Instead, it is far more valuable to learn how to check an exchange's reliability yourself:
- License and registration: in Turkey, crypto asset service providers must be registered with MASAK and, under the 2024 regulation, are subject to oversight by the Capital Markets Board (SPK). Confirm from official sources whether the exchange holds this registration.
- Company information: are the name, address and history of the company running the exchange clear and verifiable?
- Reputation and track record: has it existed for a long time in independent sources, and does it have a history of serious complaints?
- Security: two-factor authentication (2FA), transparent fees, clear terms of use.
- Official channel: download the app only from the official site or official app store; do not trust an ad or message link.
The summary question is this: not "which is best" but "is this platform licensed and verifiable". I compiled the exchanges that operate legally and have an office in Turkey in a separate article.
Common Types of Crypto Fraud
Knowing the mechanisms is half of protection. Let us group the most common fraud types under three headings.
Pig Butchering and Romance Scams
In pig butchering, the scammer first builds friendship and trust over social media or messaging, then directs you to a fake exchange as "a platform that earns a lot"; they slowly "fatten" the victim and make them invest big and lose it. Romance scams build an emotional relationship on a dating app or social media and ask for money under the excuse of "let us invest together". Never trust investment tips from someone you do not know.
Phishing and Fake Giveaways
In phishing, a fake email or site tries to steal your login details or your wallet recovery phrase (seed phrase); Kaspersky's guide explains phishing types well. Fake giveaways work with the logic of "send X crypto, get double back", usually imitating a celebrity or company name. No real campaign asks you to send money first.
Rug Pull
In a rug pull, a fake project or coin is launched, money is collected from investors, and the founders suddenly run away; the coin becomes worthless. The risk is high in new and unknown projects. I addressed these traps one by one in my guide to protecting your crypto assets.
'I Can't Withdraw': The Pay-a-Fee/Tax Trap
Not being able to withdraw and being told to "pay a commission or tax first" is the clearest stage of fake exchange fraud; it is an almost certain sign of a scam. The scenario works like this: you deposit money into the platform, your account grows on screen as if it is "making a profit", and you get excited. When you try to withdraw, obstacles suddenly appear: "pay X percent tax first", "deposit a commission to activate the account", "collateral is needed for withdrawal".
The goal is to squeeze more money out of you; as you make these extra payments, new ones appear and in the end you withdraw nothing. A reminder: a real exchange does not ask you to pay tax or commission in advance to withdraw your money; any fee is deducted directly from the transaction. If someone asks for extra money so you can withdraw your funds, stop and make no further payment, because you will lose that money too.
What to Do Step by Step If You Have Been Scammed
Stay calm and act fast. Here is what you should do, in order:
- Stop immediately: deposit no more money; do not fall for those asking for "one last payment for recovery", because that is a separate trap.
- Keep the evidence: do not delete the messages, receipts, wallet addresses, and site and app screenshots.
- Notify your bank: if the money went via a bank or card, call your bank at once; in some cases the transaction can be stopped.
- File an official complaint: file a criminal complaint with the Public Prosecutor's Office; you can also apply to the Cybercrime units.
- Protect your accounts: change your passwords, enable 2FA, and update anywhere you used the same password.
The bitter truth: recovering money in crypto fraud is often hard, but early reporting and collecting evidence raise the odds. Do not feel ashamed; it is a very common and professionally staged crime, and the criminal is the scammer, not you.
Golden Rules for Protecting Yourself
The basic rules for protecting yourself are clear:
- "Guaranteed or high profit" is a trap; no real investment promises guaranteed wealth.
- Resist being rushed; pressure is the scammer's biggest weapon.
- Do not trust the tip or link of someone you do not know.
- Verify the exchange; use only licensed platforms accessed from official addresses.
- Do not share your recovery phrase (seed phrase) or passwords with anyone.
I explained in detail why the recovery phrase is the only key to your money in my seed phrase article. A reminder: what I write is not investment advice; crypto is already volatile and risky, and fraud risk is added on top. The best protection is not rushing, verifying, and approaching every "too good to be true" offer with suspicion.
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answers for readers who skipped to the end.




