# Recruiter messaged me on WhatsApp - real?

> Be very cautious - this is a known scam pattern. Real recruiters reach you through a company email address and move to scheduled phone or video calls. A stranger who pushes you onto WhatsApp or Telegram within the first message or two, especially with a quick offer and no real interview, is following the standard job-scam script. Verify before you trust it.

Source: https://realjobcheck.com/answers/recruiter-messaged-me-on-whatsapp-or-telegram/  
Updated: 2026-06-02 - Real Job Check Trust and Safety Research Team

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A message from a recruiter on WhatsApp or Telegram is not automatically a scam, but it lands squarely in the highest-risk pattern, so the right posture is healthy suspicion until you have confirmed who you are talking to.

## Why the channel itself is a signal

Legitimate recruiting has a paper trail: a company email address, a calendar invite, an interview. Scammers want the opposite - a private, fast, low-oversight channel - so they steer you to a chat app early. Doing so accomplishes two things for them:

- It **escapes the platform's defenses.** A fake profile on LinkedIn or Indeed can be reported and removed; a WhatsApp thread cannot. Moving you off-platform protects the scam.
- It **creates pressure in private.** On a chat app the scammer can push urgency, secrecy, and emotional momentum without anyone watching.

This is why "let's continue on Telegram" so early is a tell. The job has not been discussed, but the channel that suits a scammer has already been chosen.

## The pattern this usually fits

A WhatsApp or Telegram recruiter contact often comes bundled with the rest of the [job-scam script](/answers/is-this-job-offer-a-scam/): a role that sounds flexible and well-paid, [no real interview](/answers/job-offer-without-an-interview/), a quick offer, and then a turn toward either [paying up front](/answers/job-asking-to-pay-for-training-or-equipment/), [sharing bank or SSN details](/answers/job-asking-for-bank-account-or-ssn/), or a [task-based "earn money"](/glossary/task-scam/) setup. The chat app is the doorway; the theft comes a few messages later.

## How to verify in five minutes

1. **Do not use the contact they gave you.** Open a new browser tab and type the company's real website address yourself.
2. **Find the person.** Look for the recruiter on the company's team page or its verified LinkedIn presence. A name with no footprint at the company is a warning.
3. **Reply through official channels.** Email the company's real recruiting address and ask whether this person and this role are genuine.
4. **Check the posting.** Confirm the role is listed on the company's own careers page, not only in the message.
5. **Run it through the checker.** Paste the message into the [free checker](/#check); it inspects the sender domain, the company's official careers board, and the scam-pattern language for you.

<div class="callout" markdown="1">
**Quick test:** ask the recruiter to continue by email from their company address and to schedule a video call. A real recruiter says yes. A scammer makes excuses, insists on staying in the chat app, or disappears.
</div>

If it turns out to be an impersonation, report the fake profile to the platform it started on, file with the [FTC](https://reportfraud.ftc.gov/), and warn the real company. More on how these accounts are built in [recruiter impersonation](/glossary/recruiter-impersonation/).
