• Home
  • About Evelyn Kanter
  • Evelyn Kanter’s Books & Apps
  • Evelyn Kanter In The News
  • Workshops
  • NYC Travel Guru

Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorer

green living, smart spending

  • Green Hotels
  • Green Cars
    • Best Cars under $20,000
    • Test Drives
    • Diesel Cars
    • Electric Cars
    • Hybrid Cars
    • Hydrogen Fuel Cell
    • Luxury Drives
  • Travel Deals
    • Free
    • Budget Travel
    • Discount Tickets
  • Xplore More
    • Safety and Health
    • How To
    • Five Best
    • Travel Pioneers
    • Motorcycles
    • Vintage Cars
  • Scam Alert
  • Where to Go Next
    • Historic Travel
    • Epic Adventures
    • National Parks
Home » Travel Scams: How to Keep Your Plans Safe

Travel Scams: How to Keep Your Plans Safe

Leave a Comment

scam alert graphic_Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorerScam Alert – Don’t take fraudsters with you on your next trip.  Here ‘s how to avoid travel scams and keep your travel plans safe by avoiding trip-related rip-offs before, during and after your weekend getaway or family reunion.

Travel scams include phony travel agents selling non-existent tickets, phony airline customer service sites, and phony banking sites.

With peak spring/summer travel season underway, fraudsters are working overtime to tailor their scams to the flying, hotel bookings and online payment schemes.

hand holding cellphone_EvelynKanter
Photo: AARP

Fake Customer Support Sites

Fake customer support sites on social media are growing, which can make a harrowing situation like a cancelled flight or missed connection even worse.

For most of us, the first reaction to a cancelled or delayed flight, or missed connection, or missing luggage, is to hop onto social media for breaking advice and information.

According to cyber security company Malwarebytes, the risk of winding up on a fake site has increased since Twitter-now-X began charging for verified blue checkmarks, so many legitimate accounts no longer  show visible means of authentication.

For example, popular European budget airline easyJet cancelled 1,700 flights between July and September 2023 due to air traffic control delays, prompting fraudsters to create fake support accounts.

Such bogus accounts direct victims to fake websites and other portals in an effort to steal credentials, along with any payment data they can scrape and scoop up along the way.

Malwarebytes also reports something like 100 fake Twitter/X accounts using the easyJet branding, including several which have a gold verified check mark which are used exclusively for approved business accounts.

Here’s the main easyJet account,  The rest are a combination of “temporarily restricted” accounts, accounts set to private, even to for purchase video games.

  • Warning – If a site asks you to send your mobile number for assistance, it could open you to fraud, phishing and malware.

How to avoid travel scams including fake travel agents and fake customer service sites_ecoxplorerFake Travel Agent Sites

Phony travel agents lie in wait with fake websites and non-existent plane tickets. These sites appear in search engine results or random emails promising fantastic prices.  Remember – if an offer sounds too good to be true, it probably is.

Once you’ve paid and turned up on the day of the flight, or even just tried to check in online the day before, you’re in for a nasty surprise.

The fraudster has merely reserved a seat, as opposed to actually booking the ticket.

Meanwhile, they have cashed in on your payment.

  • Warning – if you are asked to pay by a direct payment service such as Venmo or Zelle, beware. Legitimate travel agents accept credit cards.

Also check the legitimacy of the reviews.

  • Warning – Beware iIf all the reviews are glowing five-star tributes, especially if the language is similar in each.  Also beware if all the reviews are within the last few months and there’s nothing from a few years ago, indicating a recent scam operation.

Be Careful What You Post Online

Of course you want to share your great trip with your friends. Just do it sensibly. Exact details of your home and how long you will be gone invites burglars.

  • Warning – Never post a photo of your boarding pass since it features your full legal name, your ticket number, and your passenger name record (PNR).  That’s the six-digit alpha-numeric code that is unique to your booking, which scammers can use to engineer their way into your airline or bank account.

Have a safe and memorable trip!


ecoXplorer Evelyn Kanter on Dune 45 NamibiaecoXplorer Evelyn Kanter is a journalist with 25+ years of experience as a newspaper and magazine writer, radio & TV news producer & reporter, and author of guidebooks and smartphone apps – all focusing on travel, automotive, the environment and your rights as a consumer.

ecoXplorer Evelyn Kanter currently serves as President of the International Motor Press Assn. (IMPA).

ecoXplorer Evelyn Kanter also is a member of the North American Travel Journalists Assn. (NATJA) and the North American Snowsports Journalists Assn. (NASJA).

Contact me at evelyn@ecoxplorer.com.

Copyright (C) Evelyn Kanter


 

Thanks for visiting ecoXplorer. Stay up to date with the latest news about green travel, green cars, smart spending and frugal living by subscribing. It's free. RSS feed.
Welcome back to exoXplorer. Stay up to date with the latest news about green travel, green cars and smart spending by subscribing. It's free. RSS feed.

Related Posts:

  • scam alert graphic_Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorer
    Scam Alert: Online Payment Frauds With PayPal, Venmo…
  • scam alert graphic_Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorer
    Scam Alert: E-Z Pass Scam Texts
  • iphone with icons to illustrate article on E-Z Pass scams via text_evelynkanter.com
    Holiday Shopping Scams to Avoid
  • scam alert graphic_Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorer
    Travel Scams to Avoid
  • NYC Broadway Week Sept 2025 poster_evelynkanter
    NYC Guide: Best Free & Cheap Things to Do In…
  • scam alert graphic_Evelyn Kanter ecoXplorer
    Scam Alert: Preying on Seniors

Filed Under: Smart Spending Tagged With: fake customer service sites, identity theft, travel agent scams, Venmo, Zelle

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

ecoXplorer is your guide to smart spending and eco-friendly living

ecoXplorer is published by Evelyn Kanter, an award-winning journalist with 20+ years of experience as a newspaper and magazine writer, radio & TV news producer & reporter and guidebook author – all focusing on travel, automotive, the environment and your rights as a consumer.

Evelyn Kanter is the President Emeritus of the International Motor Press Assn. (IMPA), a past Board Member of a prestigious professional group for travel journalists, and a member of several other top international organizations of journalists.

Evelyn Kanter is Senior Editor of SeniorsSkiing, which focuses on the 50+ outdoor enthusiast.

Contact me at evelyn@ecoxplorer.com or evelyn@evelynkanter.com.

Search ecoXplorer by category

© 2010-2025 ecoXplorer by Evelyn Kanter. All articles and photos are protected by US (C) Copyright laws. Any unauthorized copying is strictly prohibited. Plus, it’s just not nice.

  • Home
  • About Evelyn Kanter
  • Evelyn Kanter’s Books & Apps
  • Evelyn Kanter In The News
  • Workshops
  • NYC Travel Guru

ecoXplorer.com is an independent information service which is compensated by advertisers and sponsors. This site includes some links to other websites which are compensated for by our sponsors when you click them.