Fact Check

Avoid These $750 Cash App Scams on Facebook and Instagram

We found dozens of the scams within seconds, all with a simple search.

Published Jan. 27, 2022

UKRAINE - 2021/03/21: In this photo illustration a Cash App and logo of a mobile payment service is seen on a smartphone in a screen. (Photo Illustration by Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) (Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)
Image Via Pavlo Gonchar/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
Claim:
People on Facebook and Instagram promise to send $750 to your Cash App account for free.

On Jan. 27, 2022, a reader sent in a tip about a Facebook ad (and likely on Instagram as well) that promised $750 in Cash App rewards for free. The Facebook page was named Kjguyrt. It had been created only a few days before:

Facebook scams that promise a payment of $750 in Cash App or CashApp should be avoided.
The page claimed to be a dry cleaning company. This was not true.

One user who realized it was a scam commented: "Take your stupid f*cking advertising and stick it up your ass."

After a few seconds of some simple searching on Facebook, we were able to uncover a seemingly endless number of more posts, groups, and events that promoted a similar $750 Cash App scam. Most of them appeared to lead to brief surveys in Google Docs or on sites.google.com pages before ultimately asking users for personal identifiable information (PII).

Such scams have a chance of eventually leading to phishing, identity theft, or other harmful outcomes. No one was genuinely giving away $750 on Cash App for free on Facebook or Instagram.

Examples on Facebook Pages

This one from a page named Flash Reward had been around since at least May 2021:

Facebook scams that promise a payment of $750 in Cash App or CashApp should be avoided.
Many of the scams led to surveys before ultimately asking for personal information.

Meanwhile, some of the pages we found put the scam in the name: $750 Cash App. This one led to scams on WhatsApp:

Facebook scams that promise a payment of $750 in Cash App or CashApp should be avoided.
Facebook and WhatsApp are both owned by Meta.

Examples in Facebook Groups

One of the Facebook groups we discovered was named Cash App/PAYPAL BLESSINGS. It had more than 13,000 members. In the rules for the group, it said: "This group is for BLESSINGS only no scams." However, we only found scams.

One of the posts from a Facebook user named Stash Account, which had nothing to do with the real finance app, posted in the group: "If you haven't gotten Help Drop Tag Names & Check Balance, I am Legit Limited Time."

Text, Electronics, Credit Card
"I am legit" is never a good sign.

The Stash Account person responded to hundreds of people with the scam in a comment that looked like this:

Text, Label, Credit Card
"Let's claim your reward here." No thanks.

This other Facebook group was named CashApp $750 and placed its scam links in the "About" section of the page:

It's unclear why these Facebook groups were allowed to exist seeing as they were so easy to find.

Examples in Facebook Events

On top of Facebook accounts, pages, and groups all being involved in the $750 Cash App scams, also including Instagram posts, we found well over 600 Facebook events that had been created for the ruse. There were likely many more. However, our Google Chrome browser window couldn't handle loading any further listings, as it was already so much information for the tab to handle at once.

Here's a sample of what a few of the Facebook events looked like.

We looked into the Facebook events to see if they differed from the way the scam operated on pages and in groups. From what we saw, it looked like they, too, initially led to surveys that eventually ended up asking for PII.

We previously reported on similar scams that offered $750 in Cash App that impersonated talk show host Ellen DeGeneres. Some of those accounts appeared to still be active as of late January.

It's unclear why these $750 Cash App scams were allowed to thrive on Facebook and Instagram when they were so easy to hunt down. We recommend that readers stay far away from any social media posts or ads that promise free money.

For further reading, we recently infiltrated a cryptocurrency scam on Facebook. It wasn't difficult to find our way into the scam. However, what was unexpected was the fact that Facebook took no action on the scam despite the fact that we contacted the company's media relations team by email. It, too, was still active at the end of January.

Jordan Liles is a Senior Reporter who has been with Snopes since 2016.

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