I Got Scammed in Crypto — Can I Get My Money Back? A Realistic Recovery Guide

I Got Scammed in Crypto — Can I Get My Money Back? A Realistic Recovery Guide

Tracing your coins is not the same as recovering them. Here’s what actually works in the first 72 hours, and the second scam to refuse.

Updated 2026
The 60-second answer

Short version, because you are in a hurry:

QuestionHonest answer
Can I get my crypto back?Sometimes, but only if it hit a KYC exchange and you report within ~24–72 hours. Money in a private wallet, mixer, or bridge is near-unrecoverable.
I can see my coins on Etherscan — doesn’t that mean I can get them back?No. Tracing is not recovery. There is no chargeback or reverse button on-chain.
Where do I report? (U.S.)File at ic3.gov (FBI IC3) and reportfraud.ftc.gov (FTC), then flag the destination exchange’s law-enforcement channel. It’s free.
Should I hire a “recovery service”?No. Upfront-fee recovery agencies are almost always a second scam (10,500+ complaints, ~$1.4B in 2025). Law enforcement never charges a fee.
What do I gather?TxIDs, destination addresses, exchange/platform names, timestamps, USD amounts, and full-conversation screenshots.

You just realized it was a scam, and the first thing you did was open a block explorer and watch your coins sitting in someone else’s wallet. That sight is doing something cruel to you: it makes recovery feel one phone call away. This guide is the honest version. It separates what you can see from what you can actually get back, walks the exact U.S. reporting steps that still matter in the first hours, and names the second scam that is already circling you. No promises, no upfront-fee “recovery” pitch, just what genuinely moves the needle and what does not.

Crypto scam recovery decision flowchart: where the stolen funds landed decides your realistic odds. Funds on a centralized exchange leave some hope if you report to police or the FBI IC3 fast and have them request a freeze; funds sent to a self-custody wallet, mixer or bridge are near-impossible to recover. Tracing is not the same as a refund, and any recovery service that asks for an upfront fee is a second scam.
Where the stolen crypto landed decides your realistic recovery odds — and why ‘fund recovery’ services that charge upfront are the second scam.

1. Before you touch anything else: the next 24–72 hours decide almost everything

If you are reading this within a day of realizing what happened, that timing is the most
valuable thing you have. Recovery in crypto is rarely about being clever after the fact. It is
about how fast the report reaches someone who can freeze an account before the money moves
again.

Scammers do not park stolen funds. They chain them: victim wallet, then a fresh address,
then a swap, then a bridge to another chain, then a cash-out exchange in a jurisdiction that
will never answer a U.S. subpoena. Every hop that completes before your report lands is a door
that closes. That is why the practical window is measured in hours, roughly the first 24 to 72,
not in weeks.

Do these five things before you do anything else. They cost nothing and they preserve every
option you might have later.

  1. Screenshot everything now. The chat, the “platform” dashboard, the withdrawal page, the
    wallet addresses, the transaction hashes. Platforms and profiles vanish the moment they suspect
    you have caught on.
  2. Do not delete the conversation and do not confront the scammer. Tipping them off just
    speeds up the cash-out. Investigators will want the thread intact.
  3. Copy your transaction IDs (TxIDs) and the destination addresses from your wallet or the
    exchange withdrawal history. Paste them into a note. This is the single most important piece of
    evidence.
  4. Write a plain timeline — dates, amounts, the platform or person’s name, phone numbers,
    any bank or card transfers that fed the crypto purchase.
  5. If your own wallet or an exchange account was touched, secure it (new device, revoke
    approvals, move remaining funds). More on that near the end.
ItemReality
Reporting window that matters mostFirst 24–72 hours, before funds are moved on
Are exchange freezes automatic?No. They require a law-enforcement request, subpoena, or court order
Typical hold once a request lands (Binance.US LERT)About two weeks while the request is reviewed
If the freeze window is missedFunds route through DEXs, mixers, or privacy coins and effectively disappear

2. The hard truth up front: seeing your coins on Etherscan is not getting them back

Here is the part almost nobody tells you up front, and it is the whole reason this guide
exists. Being able to see your money is not the same as being able to get it back.

Open Etherscan, or any block explorer, paste your transaction hash, and you can watch your
coins sit in the thief’s address like they are behind glass. That visibility feels like a lead.
It feels like proof that should force someone to hand it over. It is not. A public ledger records
who holds what; it grants no one the power to reverse a transfer.

Crypto has no chargeback. When you pay with a credit card and get scammed, the card network
can claw the money back from the merchant because a bank sits in the middle with the authority to
reverse it. On-chain, there is no bank in the middle and no reverse button. A confirmed
transaction is final by design. “Tracing” and “recovery” are two different problems: tracing is a
data question that blockchain analytics firms are genuinely good at; recovery is a legal and
custodial question that depends entirely on whether the coins ever land somewhere a real authority
can reach.

Keep these two ideas separate for the rest of this article. Traceability (can the money be
followed?) is usually yes. Recoverability (can it be returned to you?) is usually the harder
question, and the honest answer is often no. Anyone who blurs the two — “we traced it, so we can
get it back” — is setting you up.

3. Your one real lever: did the money land on a U.S.-reachable exchange?

Strip away the noise and your realistic odds come down to one American variable: did the stolen
money land on, or pass through, an exchange that U.S. law enforcement can actually reach, and did
it get there while there was still a balance to freeze?

Centralized exchanges run KYC. They hold customer funds, they have a compliance team, and they
respond to subpoenas and court orders. That combination is the only real lever an ordinary victim
has. If the trail ends at a Coinbase, Kraken, Binance.US, Bybit, or similar deposit address, there
is at least a mechanism: a law-enforcement request can put a hold on that account. It is not a
guarantee, the balance may already be gone, and the exchange will not act on your say-so alone —
but a lever exists.

If instead the trail ends at a self-custody wallet the thief controls, or disappears into a
mixer or a cross-chain bridge, there is no one to serve and no account to freeze. The coins are as
gone as cash handed to a stranger who walked into a crowd. This is not defeatism; it is the
structure of the system, and pretending otherwise is how the second scam gets its foot in the
door.

The quick self-check

  • Trail ends at a KYC exchange, reported fast: a freeze is possible. Move now.
  • Trail ends at a private wallet / mixer / bridge: report it for the record and for
    pattern-matching, but set your expectations near zero.

4. Do this in the next hour: ic3.gov, the FTC, and the exchange’s law-enforcement channel

In the United States, your primary channel is the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center. File
online at ic3.gov. It is free, it is the federal intake point that routes complaints to the
right field office, and it is the record investigators and exchanges will look for. Then add a
report at the FTC’s reportfraud.ftc.gov, which feeds federal and state consumer-protection
databases.

In the next hour, in this order

  1. File the IC3 complaint at ic3.gov. Be specific and include every TxID, wallet address,
    platform name, phone number, email, and the dollar amounts with timestamps. Vague complaints go
    nowhere; a complaint with clean on-chain evidence is something an agent can act on.
  2. Report to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. This does not replace IC3; it widens the paper
    trail and helps map the operation across victims.
  3. Contact the destination exchange’s law-enforcement / compliance channel if you know the
    funds landed there. You cannot order a freeze as a customer, but you can flag the deposit address
    and get a case reference so that when law enforcement’s request arrives, the exchange already has
    context. Binance.US, for example, works law-enforcement freeze requests through its LERT (Law
    Enforcement Request Tracker) process, which can hold an account for roughly two weeks while the
    request is reviewed.
  4. If money moved through your bank, wire, or card first, call that institution’s fraud
    line immediately. The fiat leg sometimes has a reversal window that the crypto leg never will.
The evidence packet law enforcement actually wants (the 5 W’s plus the hashes):
transaction IDs, every destination address, the exchange or platform names, exact timestamps, the
amounts in USD, and screenshots of the full conversation and any fake “account” dashboard. Assemble
this once and reuse it for every report.

5. Follow the money: a destination map that sets your realistic odds

Where the money landed sets your odds more than any other factor. This map is blunt on purpose,
because false hope is exactly what the recovery scammers sell.

Where the funds landed / scam typeRecovery leverRealistic odds
Into a centralized (KYC) exchangeLaw-enforcement freeze request, court order, exchange complianceLow to moderate, and only if reported fast
Into a self-custody wallet the thief controlsNone in practiceNear zero
Through a mixer or cross-chain bridgeNone in practiceNear zero
Rug pull (project vanished with the pool)Class action / civil, very slowUnder 5%
Large protocol / exchange hackDepends on negotiation and law enforcement, out of your handsAs low as ~0.4%

Read that table as a filter, not a verdict on effort. Reporting is worth doing in every row,
because your complaint may connect to a larger case even when your individual coins are gone. But
if your trail is in one of the “near zero” rows, anyone promising to recover it for a fee is
telling you something the ledger says is impossible.

6. What kind of scam was it? Recovery routes by scam type

The reporting steps are the same, but the details you emphasize and the slim recovery angle
change with the type of scam. Match yours below.

Investment scams and “pig butchering”

This is the biggest category by far. A stranger or “romantic” contact builds trust over weeks,
then steers you to a fake trading or “staking” platform that shows fake profits until you try to
withdraw and get hit with “tax” or “unlock” fees. Report to IC3 with the platform URL, every
deposit address, and the contact’s numbers and handles. Your money almost always routed to
exchange deposit addresses on its way out, so flag those fast — this is one of the few scam types
where a freeze occasionally catches something.

Romance scams

Same reporting path, and the emotional aftermath is real. The recovery angle is identical to the
investment case, because the money followed the same route. Preserve the relationship history; it
helps investigators tie accounts together.

Fake exchanges and fake platforms

If you deposited to a platform that turned out to be fake, the “balance” you see in its
dashboard is a number in their database, not crypto you own. Recovery depends on where your real
deposit went on-chain. Report the domain to IC3 and the FTC so it can be taken down for the next
person.

Phishing and approval-drain attacks

Here you signed a malicious transaction or approval and a drainer emptied the wallet. The urgent
job is not recovery; it is stopping the next drain, because the approval you signed can let
them come back. Revoke approvals immediately and treat the wallet as compromised. See the
step-by-step in how to revoke token approvals, and if a seed phrase or
private key was exposed rather than just an approval, jump to what to do when
your seed phrase is exposed
.

P2P trade scams

If you got scammed on an exchange’s P2P marketplace (fake payment proof, reversed bank
transfer), open a P2P dispute with the exchange inside the app at once and attach the
evidence — this is one of the rare cases with a built-in resolution process, because the
counterparty is a KYC’d user of that exchange.

Two sibling situations often get confused with a scam. If an exchange froze your own
withdrawal or locked your account, that is a compliance hold, not a theft — see
withdrawal frozen / account locked. If a deposit you sent never showed up,
it is usually a wrong-network or pending issue, not a scam — see
deposit not credited.

7. The second scam coming for you: ‘recovery agencies’ and fake law firms

Within days of being scammed — sometimes within hours — a second predator arrives. They find
you in the comments of a scam-warning video, in a Telegram group, or through a cold DM, and they
promise to get your money back. “Crypto recovery agency.” “Fund recovery service.” “Blockchain
tracing expert.” “We work with law enforcement.” Some even pose as a law firm that specializes in
crypto fraud. The FBI has issued repeated public warnings about exactly this, including a June 2024
alert specifically about fraudsters impersonating law firms, and reported more than 10,500 of these
recovery-fraud complaints totaling around $1.4 billion in 2025 alone.

The tell is simple and it never changes: they ask for money upfront. A retainer, a
“tracing fee,” a “gas fee,” a “tax” to release the recovered funds, an “international transfer
charge.” Pay one and another appears. It is the original scam’s structure, aimed at a victim who
has already proven they will pay.

Red flagWhat it means
Any upfront fee to “recover” your fundsDefinitive sign of a recovery scam
Claims to be law enforcement, a law firm, or the exchangeImpersonation; the FBI warned specifically about fake law firms
New “tax,” “unlock,” or “transfer” fees keep appearingSerial extortion — the money never comes
Asks for your seed phrase, private key, or wallet accessA direct attempt to drain what you have left
Shows a slick “trace report,” then goes quiet after paymentThe classic disappearing pattern
Three rules that will save you a second time. (1) Real law enforcement never charges you a
fee to investigate. (2) There is no “reversal” or “chargeback” on-chain, so anyone guaranteeing
your funds back is lying. (3) Never, ever share your seed phrase or private key with anyone
claiming to help — that is not recovery, that is the next theft. This article does not refer anyone
to a paid recovery service, because the honest ones are rare and the pattern is too dangerous to
send you toward.

8. What the numbers actually say: IC3’s $11.4B, and why a seizure is not your refund

It helps to see the scale, because the numbers do two things at once: they show you are not
alone, and they quietly explain why individual recovery is so rare.

MetricValueSource / year
Losses involving digital assets$9.3B across ~150,000 complaints (up 66% YoY)FBI IC3, 2024
Investment fraud (largest category)$6.57BFBI IC3, 2024
Pig-butchering / romance-investment scams$5.8B across 41,557 victimsFBI IC3, 2024
Total crypto fraud losses~$11.4B, about half of all reported U.S. fraud lossesFBI IC3, 2025
Recovery-fraud (second-scam) complaints10,500+ complaints, ~$1.4BFBI IC3, 2025
Total internet-crime losses$16.6B (up 33% YoY, a record)FBI IC3, 2024

There is a genuinely hopeful line in this data. Through the FBI’s Operation Level Up,
6,475 victims had been proactively notified by July 2025, and the program is credited with saving
around $400.9 million. But note the detail that matters most: 77% of those victims did not know
they were being scammed
when the FBI reached out. The single biggest reason recovery fails is
that people realize too late. Reading this now, early, is the advantage.

Do not let a headline seizure distort your expectations. When you read that authorities
seized 61,000 BTC or forfeited $15 billion tied to a criminal network, that is a government
enforcement action against an organization. It is not a refund pipeline for individual victims, and
those funds are typically tied up in forfeiture proceedings for years. A big seizure is good news
for the rule of law. It is almost never your personal check in the mail.

9. One thing that can soften the loss at tax time: the IRC §165 theft-loss question

If none of the money comes back, there is one narrow door left that has nothing to do with the
scammer: how the loss is treated at tax time. In the U.S., a genuine theft loss can raise the
question of an IRC §165 theft-loss deduction. It is worth asking about, but it is not the
easy write-off many people assume.

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspended most personal casualty and theft-loss deductions through
2025, with a carve-out that generally requires the loss to arise from a transaction entered into
for profit. That distinction — a scam dressed up as an “investment” versus a purely personal loss —
matters a lot, and it is exactly the kind of judgment a professional should make on your specific
facts. You will also need your documentation: the same TxIDs, timestamps, and the IC3/FTC report
numbers that prove the loss and when you discovered it.

This section is not tax advice, and the rules shift year to year. Bring your evidence packet to a
qualified CPA or tax attorney before claiming anything. Do not let a “recovery” outfit file amended
returns for you — that is another way these operations extract fees and personal data.

10. Close the other doors before they drain more: revoke approvals and secure the wallet

Before you spend another day chasing what is gone, close the doors that could still be leaking.
If your wallet was involved at all, assume the attacker may still have a way back in.

  • Revoke token approvals. A single malicious approval can let a drainer pull tokens again
    and again, long after the first hit. Walk through it in
    how to revoke token approvals.
  • If your seed phrase or private key was exposed, revoking approvals is not enough, because
    the thief can re-approve forever. You need to move everything to a brand-new wallet created on a
    clean device, in the right order. That is its own emergency:
    seed phrase exposed — what to do.
  • If an exchange withdrawal or account got locked in the fallout, that is a compliance
    hold, handled differently from a theft: withdrawal frozen / account
    locked
    .
  • If you sent a deposit that never arrived and are wondering whether you were scammed, it
    is usually a network or pending issue, not fraud: deposit not
    credited
    .

Prevention is a separate subject from recovery, and it deserves its own read once the fire is
out. For now, the goal is narrow: stop further loss, get the report on file within the window, and
refuse the second scam.

FAQ: the questions every scammed American asks in the first 48 hours

Q. Can I really get my scammed crypto back?
Sometimes, and only under specific conditions: the stolen funds reached a KYC exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, Binance.US, Bybit and similar), and you got a law-enforcement request in motion before the balance moved on — realistically within 24–72 hours. If the money went to a self-custody wallet, a mixer, or across a bridge, the honest answer is that individual recovery odds are near zero. There is no chargeback on a blockchain.
Q. I can see my coins on the blockchain — doesn’t that prove I can recover them?
No. A block explorer like Etherscan shows you exactly where the money is, but visibility is not custody and it is not authority. Tracing is a data problem that analysts can solve; recovery is a legal and custodial problem that only works if the coins land somewhere a real authority can freeze. Being able to watch your funds does not give anyone the power to send them back.
Q. Where do I report a crypto scam in the U.S.?
File a complaint with the FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center at ic3.gov, then report to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Both are free. Include every transaction ID, destination wallet address, platform name, timestamp, dollar amount, and screenshots. If you know which exchange received the funds, also contact that exchange’s law-enforcement or compliance channel so they have context when the official request arrives.
Q. Are crypto recovery services or ‘fund recovery agencies’ legit?
Almost never, when they ask for money upfront. The FBI has issued repeated warnings about recovery-scam operations, including ones impersonating law firms, and logged more than 10,500 such complaints totaling around $1.4 billion in 2025. The rule is absolute: real law enforcement never charges you a fee to investigate, there is no on-chain reversal to sell you, and you should never give anyone your seed phrase or private key. An upfront fee is the scam.
Q. How fast do I have to act for a freeze to be possible?
Think hours, not days — roughly the first 24 to 72. Exchange freezes are not automatic; they require a law-enforcement request, subpoena, or court order, and they only help while there is still a balance sitting in that account. Binance.US, for example, can hold an account for about two weeks once a Law Enforcement Request Tracker (LERT) request lands, but that only matters if you report before the funds are swapped and moved on.
Q. What information do I need to gather before I report?
The 5 W’s plus the hashes: transaction IDs (TxIDs), every destination address, the exchange and platform names, exact timestamps, the amounts in USD, and screenshots of the full conversation and any fake account dashboard. Do not delete the chat and do not confront the scammer — tipping them off just speeds up the cash-out and destroys evidence investigators need.
Q. The FBI seized billions in crypto — will I get a cut?
Very unlikely to be a direct or quick refund. Large seizures and forfeitures, like tens of thousands of BTC tied to a criminal network, are enforcement actions against organizations, and the funds are typically locked in legal proceedings for years. Report your case anyway, because it can strengthen a broader investigation, but do not let a headline seizure set your expectations for a personal payout.
Q. Can I at least deduct the loss on my taxes?
Possibly, through an IRC §165 theft-loss claim, but it is narrower than most people think. The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act suspended most personal theft-loss deductions through 2025, generally leaving a path only for losses tied to a transaction entered into for profit. Whether an investment-style scam qualifies depends on your specific facts, so bring your evidence packet to a qualified CPA or tax attorney. This is not tax advice.
This article is for general information about reporting and recovery after a crypto scam. It is not legal, tax, or investment advice, and it does not guarantee any recovery outcome. Reporting channels, agency hotlines, and statistics are current as of the update date and can change — verify with the official portals (ic3.gov, reportfraud.ftc.gov) and consult a qualified professional for your situation. We do not endorse or refer any paid recovery service. Never share your seed phrase or private key with anyone.

Next: lock your wallet down — revoke risky token approvals →

Editorial standardsIndependent crypto editorial · honest, no hype · not investment advice.
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