9 Scams Every College Student (and Parent) Needs to Watch For

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Imagine you’re a scam artist looking for a vulnerable group to prey on.

Older people are often good marks, but they’re dispersed throughout the population, so finding a group to victimize can prove problematic. The very young are too often protected by parents and may not have enough money to make them worthwhile targets. But college students? Perfect.

College students are old enough to have money, young enough to be vulnerable and likely to be unsupervised and away from home for the first time. Added bonus: They’re not hard to find because they congregate by the thousands on campuses nationwide.

Now that you’ve gotten inside the head of those who might be preying on you or someone you love, take a few minutes to study some common college scams.

1. Tuition scam

Someone calls claiming to be with your school’s administration or admissions. They warn that your tuition is late and as a result, you’ll be dropped from your classes today. You’re ordered to pay immediately, over the phone, with a credit or prepaid card.

Solution : If you get a call involving money from anyone regarding anything, get off the phone and call the office that was mentioned yourself. Simply explain to whoever is calling that you’ll be calling them back, then check the status of whatever seems to be the problem.

This scam is a variation of the old unpaid bill scam, in which someone gets a call warning of dire consequences if they don’t immediately send money. In another common iteration, it’s a fake IRS agent warning of jail time.

2. Bad behavior

College students are legendary when it comes to finding ways to get into trouble or compromising positions. But now everyone has a smartphone, and therefore a camera. So, everything can, and will, be photographed and/or captured on video. And, yes, there are people who will pretend to like you but are actually setting you up for blackmail.

One only has to recall the Ashley Madison hack of 2015 to imagine what can happen when extremely personal information falls into the wrong hands.

Solution : If you’re going to do anything at college you wouldn’t do in front of your parents or a prospective employer, think twice. If you’re around people you don’t know, and/or you have been drinking, think 10 or 20 times.

3. Fake credit cards … and real ones

The Credit Card Accountability, Responsibility, and Disclosure (CARD) Act of 2009 banned banks from heavy credit card marketing on campus, but that doesn’t mean banks and card companies don’t still actively pursue college students.