A sudden text message can trigger instant panic. Imagine receiving one from “Binance” alerting you that a large withdrawal has been made from your account. The message urges you to “Call this number immediately if you haven’t authorized this transaction.”

This is a sophisticated and unfortunately common phishing scam. The goal is to use fear and urgency to trick you into willingly handing over your account credentials and two-factor authentication (2FA) codes to a criminal.

If you’ve received this message, or worse, already called the number, this guide will help you understand the scam and take the right steps to protect yourself and others.

The Golden Rule: Never Call the Number

This is the most critical piece of advice: Legitimate companies like Binance will NEVER send you an unsolicited text message containing a phone number for you to call.

How the Scam Works

  1. The Phishing Text: You receive a realistic-looking SMS claiming to be from Binance.

  2. The Urgent Call to Action: The message creates fear that your account is being drained.

  3. The Fake Support Agent: You call the number and are connected to a convincing “support agent.”

  4. Social Engineering: The scammer gains your trust and asks for your login details, 2FA codes, or remote access to your computer to “stop the transaction.”

  5. Theft: With this information, they gain full access to your account and withdraw all your funds.

Step-by-Step: What To Do If You Engaged With the Scam

If you provided any information or made the call, act immediately. Time is critical.

Step 1: Secure Your Binance Account

  1. Regain Access: If you’re locked out, use Binance’s official account recovery process on their official website (www.binance.com).

  2. Change Your Password: Immediately change your Binance account password. Create a strong, unique password that you don’t use anywhere else.

  3. Revoke API Keys & Log Out Devices: In your Binance account settings, go to API Management and Security Dashboard. Delete any unknown API keys and log out of all devices to eject the scammer.

  4. Review 2FA Settings: If you gave the scammer a 2FA code, they may have compromised your authenticator. If you can, disable and then immediately re-enable your Two-Factor Authentication (2FA). We highly recommend using an authenticator app (like Google Authenticator or Authy) instead of SMS-based 2FA, which is vulnerable to SIM-swapping.

Step 2: Secure Your Broader Finances

Step 3: Document the Evidence

Gathering evidence is crucial for reporting the crime and helping authorities.

Step 4: Report the Scam

Reporting is essential. It helps authorities track criminal groups and raises awareness.

  1. Report to Binance Directly: File a detailed report through the official Binance support channel in the app or website. Their security team can investigate.

  2. Report to National Authorities:

How to Protect Yourself in the Future

You Are Not Alone

Falling for a sophisticated scam can be embarrassing, but these criminals are experts at manipulation. The most important thing you can do is take action to secure your accounts and report the crime to help prevent others from becoming victims.

ScamHelp.net is dedicated to providing free, unbiased information to help consumers avoid and report scams. For the latest scam alerts and advice, bookmark our site and check back regularly. Together, we can build a more informed and scam-aware community.

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