How to spot a fake job before it's too late
- Written by: Tania Evans, CEO and Founder of WorkPro

Many people have fallen for fake job ads, at least once in their lives. And even today, with all the information available at our finger tips, job scams are on the rise. This year alone, Scamwatch has recorded more than 1,500 job and employment scams, with reported losses exceeding $4.4 million. But they are no longer the clumsy and obvious cons they used to be. Today's fake job listings are polished and professionally worded.
As someone who works at the intersection of workforce compliance and job readiness, I've watched these tactics grow more sophisticated, and I've seen the real harm they cause to people simply trying to find work.
Anyone can fall for a scam. While the younger job seekers are often cited in the headlines, scams also lure people exploring new career pathways, migrants navigating an unfamiliar employment system, or a new or uncertain career moment. The common thread emerges: exposure to a process that feels unfamiliar, something a scammer will exploit every time.
So what does a legitimate hiring process actually look like?
Start with the basics: can you verify it?
A genuine job opportunity should always be traceable. That means the role appears on the company's official careers page, the branding and job description are consistent across platforms, and the communication you receive matches what's publicly available. If you can't independently verify that the job exists at the organisation it claims to be from, stop and look closer. This one check alone can save you a lot of time.
The role itself should also make sense. A legitimate position will describe actual responsibilities, a real location (even remote roles have structure around them), and some sense of how the job fits within a team. Vague listings promising high pay for minimal effort or detail are a red flag.
Watch how they communicate
Legitimate employers use professional, traceable channels. Emails should come from a company domain, not a Gmail or Hotmail address. You should be able to call the organisation directly using a phone number listed on their official website. If you're being contacted through WhatsApp, SMS, or social media out of nowhere, it's entirely reasonable to ask how they found you, and to verify the company independently before engaging further.
Pressure is another warning sign. Scammers create urgency because scrutiny is their enemy. A real employer will not only tolerate your due diligence, they'll expect it.
The clearest red flag of all: they ask for money
No legitimate employer will ever ask you to pay to secure a job. Not for "training materials," not for "administrative fees," and certainly not via gift cards or cryptocurrency. These tactics mirror other well-known scams and have no place in a genuine hiring process. If that request appears at any point, walk away.
There is one nuance worth understanding here. In some genuine hiring processes, candidates may be asked to cover the cost of their own background check, such as a Working with Children Check or similar. This is different, and the distinction matters. When this is legitimate, it will be introduced later in the process (not at first contact), the purpose will be clearly explained, the provider will be verifiable, and you'll receive a copy of the result for your own records. Context and transparency are everything.
Handle your personal data carefully
If you're completing any online checks or onboarding steps, take a moment to assess the platform before you enter anything. A trustworthy system will display its privacy policy and terms of use clearly, explain how your information is stored, managed, and accessed, and make it easy to understand who can see your data and how you can control it. If that information is absent or buried in confusing language, reconsider before proceeding.
A few practical checks that take minutes
Search for the company and the role independently. Look for the listing on an official careers page. Check reviews on Glassdoor or discussions on Reddit. Call the company directly using a publicly listed phone number, one you've found yourself, not one they've provided. These steps are simple and can quickly confirm whether something is real.
If something feels off, pause
If anything feels unclear, rushed, or inconsistent, it is always appropriate to stop. Take time to ask questions, verify details independently, and step back from situations that create pressure. Legitimate employers will always support that level of due diligence because a well-structured hiring process is designed to be transparent.
A legitimate job opportunity should always stand up to a few simple questions. Taking a few extra minutes to verify a role, understand the process, and confirm how your information is being handled can make all the difference. Clarity is the strongest safeguard.
WorkPro is a job-readiness and workforce compliance technology company that supports both employers and job seekers to navigate hiring processes safely, securely, and with confidence.
About Tania Evans:
Tania Evans is the Founder and CEO of WorkPro, one of Australia's leading job-readiness and workforce compliance platforms.
Since founding the business in 2007, Tania has been focused on solving a challenge that sits at the heart of every workforce: how organisations can meet their compliance obligations, manage risk and build trust, without creating unnecessary barriers for people entering and participating in work.
Drawing on her background in recruitment and marketing, Tania recognised early that fragmented compliance processes were slowing hiring, increasing administrative burden and creating poor experiences for both employers and workers. She established WorkPro to simplify the journey from candidate to compliant, job-ready worker, helping organisations navigate increasingly complex workforce requirements while creating a smoother path into employment.
Over almost two decades, Tania has developed deep expertise in workforce compliance, job-readiness, workforce screening, onboarding and regulatory change. She is passionate about helping organisations strike the right balance between risk, trust and opportunity, ensuring workforce processes protect businesses while enabling people to access work, contribute and succeed.
Tania is a strong advocate for practical innovation that reduces friction in the world of work and improves outcomes for both employers and workers.























