Blacklist

Scammer Blacklist 2026
Spot and Avoid Online Dating Scams

Online dating is exciting, yet it also appeals to individuals who look at someone’s trust as a weakness to be exploited. Romance scams have become more sophisticated over the last few years: organized networks set up fake identities, use stolen photos, and create an emotional story to make victims send money.

That’s why the Scammer Blacklist 2026 was founded: to expose them. We want to help you identify red flags before things go out of hand and you suffer serious emotional and financial damage due to online dating fraud.

Blacklist of Dating Scammers from Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, and the Baltic States

A Please note: These reports were submitted by users and have not been verified by Verified-Love.com. If you see your name here by mistake or want to dispute a listing, contact us here.

Viktoria Chumachenko
Viktoria Chumachenko
Ukraine
Scam pattern: she pretends to be sick or claims to have family problems, then asks for money for a plane ticket, medication, medical treatment, or other urgent expenses. Once the money is sent, she disappears, stops answering calls, and becomes unreachable. ...
Ange Capiozzo
Ange Capiozzo
Other
  ...
ANASTASSIYA BOZHKO
ANASTASSIYA BOZHKO
Russia
Anna Belyakova said that the Russian gov needs a deposit of 100 euro per day to unlock the visa, money needs to be sent to: ANASTASSIYA BOZHKO from Kazakhstan ...
Nadya Dalinova
Nadya Dalinova
Ukraine
Please contact us if you are in contact with a person using same name of same pictures ...
Vladislava Deli
Vladislava Deli
Ukraine
I met a woman using the name Vladislava Deli, also called Vlada Deli, on MillionaireMatch.com. Shortly after our first contact, her dating profile disappeared, and we continued talking on WhatsApp using the number +380 66 182 3753. She told me she was 26 years old, lived in Melitopol, Ukraine, and t...
Yevhenii Zdor
Yevhenii Zdor
Ukraine
A user submitted a report about a woman who appears to use the surname Zdor. The available information was limited to a profile photo and an image of a Ukrainian passport. The passport was apparently shared to confirm identity, but it raised doubts. Some details in the image looked inconsistent with...
Maryna Koreniuk
Maryna Koreniuk
Ukraine
On se rencontrer sur Tinder, Aprés une semaine elle a décide de venir me voir, Elle m’a dit il fallait prendre la taxi jusqu’à Pologne pour prend l’avion. Elle m’a dit elle habite à la ville Donetsk, J’ai envoyé l’argent pour le taxi Savoir à peu près 500€ Elle m&...
Vlada
Vlada
Ukraine
Natalia Shrolyk
Natalia Shrolyk
Russia
Natalia Shrolyk  Making new accounts on telegram  her new telegram is natalia_shr i found her accidentally when I realised her old telegram she tried scamming me on got suddenly deleted..  she probably will make accounts under the same nick that could be slightly different but it will refer to her f...
Diana Techenko
Diana Techenko
Ukraine
A professional dater, a real Ukrainian woman who is asking for money different men at the same time ...
Svetlana Kovaleva
Svetlana Kovaleva
Russia
Starts out overly friendly , soon loves you and has a month long vacation . But no money ..Needs a small amount for a visa , then $2000 for airfare .Then needs money to show she has available money for travel to get the visa . Ready to travel but is arrested at Moscow Airport for smuggling caviar . ...
Natalia Shrolyk
Natalia Shrolyk
Ukraine
  I remember this day very well, I signed up for Ukrainedate.com on 5th of November 2025 .. it took only a couple of days to come across a very elegant lady named Natasha 24 years old who was young and had a profile that was worth reading and consider her a match.. but also a queen in manipulat...
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What Is the Scammer Blacklist?

This is a publicly available, user-submitted list of people reported for online dating scams. Each entry is added by someone who had a negative or suspicious experience online — whether it was a fake profile, stolen photos, or a request for money after a few chats.

We do not verify these reports individually. They represent real experiences shared by users who want to warn others. The list is regularly updated and completely free to browse.

Important: Being listed here does not automatically mean someone is a confirmed scammer. All information comes from user submissions and is published for awareness.

Led by Experience: Dimitri Berezniakov

The project is directed by Dimitri Berezniakov, an internationally recognized expert on online dating fraud.

With more than 20 years of hands-on experience, he has investigated thousands of cases and personally helped victims recover their confidence and security after being deceived online.

Dimitri’s work goes beyond theory. He has spent years analyzing real scam patterns in Ukrainian and Russian dating networks, studying how these operations recruit, communicate, and build fake identities.
His mission remains simple: help people protect themselves through practical advice, transparent data, and accessible verification tools.

How the Dating Scammer List Works

Anyone can submit a report through our secure online form. Each entry may include:

  • The name of the person (if known)
  • Country or city of origin
  • The platform where you met (dating app, agency, or social media site)
  • Photos or screenshots exchanged during the chat
  • A short description of what happened

Once reviewed for clarity, the report becomes visible in the public database. If a victim provided images or chat excerpts, they are shown only when relevant and safe to display.

Because these are user submissions, every profile is labeled as:

  • Reported by user — not verified.
  • This approach keeps the platform transparent, while reminding visitors that the information reflects personal experiences, not confirmed investigations.

Regions We Cover

The majority of romance scam reports we receive come from Ukraine and Russia. However, many cases also involve people from Belarus, Moldova, the Baltic States, and parts of Central Asia, including Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

These regions share similar online dating ecosystems — often using the same translation agencies, fake “matchmaking” sites, and photo databases.

By including them all, the blacklist provides a broader picture of how cross-border scams operate and where users should stay especially cautious.

Free Verification: Check Before You Trust

If you’re communicating with someone from these regions and have doubts, you can request a free verification. If the woman’s profile appears in our AppleStay or webcam databases, you’ll receive a free confirmation — no account, no payment, no catch.

This basic check can prevent a costly mistake. For those who need a deeper investigation — for example, identifying a person through photos, verifying passports, or tracing social media accounts — we also offer advanced paid verification. But the first step is, and always will be, free.

Common Red Flags in Online Dating

Most romance scammers follow similar patterns. Recognizing these red flags can save you from major trouble later.

  • They ask for money. The story always sounds urgent — medical bills, a plane ticket, a sick relative, or a car accident. Whatever the reason, the request usually comes after a few days of emotional bonding.
  • Photos that seem too perfect. Scammers often steal images from social media influencers or modeling sites. Use a reverse image search to see if the same photo appears under different names.
  • They rush intimacy. It starts with fast “I miss you” messages and declarations of love. This tactic, known as love bombing, is designed to break down your skepticism.
  • They avoid video calls. Excuses range from bad internet to a broken phone. In reality, they don’t want you to see who they really are.
  • Inconsistent details. Their job, location, or background often changes from one message to the next. Many rely on translation tools and forget what they’ve said before.

If you notice any of these signs, stop the conversation and verify the profile before you share personal details or money.

How to Report a Scammer

If you’ve encountered a fake profile or suspicious behavior, you can easily report it:

  1. Go to the Add a Scam page.
  2. Fill in as many details as you can — name, nationality, platform, or screenshots.
  3. Describe what happened in your own words.
  4. Submit the form.

Our team reviews every submission for clarity and formatting. Personal contact data is never shared publicly — only information relevant to warning others.

Your report helps strengthen the community’s defense against romance scammers and protects others from repeating the same mistake.

Protect Yourself Before You Send Money

Scammers thrive on urgency and emotion. Slowing down your decisions is often enough to stay safe.

Here are simple habits that make a difference:

  • Never send money or digital gift cards to someone you haven’t met in person.
  • Use a reverse image search before believing any photo.
  • Be careful if the person refuses a video call or tries to move conversations off the dating site.
  • Ask practical questions about their daily life — scammers often can’t keep their own story straight.
  • If you’re unsure, request a free verification through our service.

Even small cautionary steps can save you thousands of dollars — and months of emotional stress.

Why This Project Matters

Behind every report is a story of trust betrayed. Many victims never tell anyone because they feel ashamed.
Our purpose is to replace that shame with knowledge.

By sharing real reports and offering free verification, this project gives people a practical way to stay safe in online dating. Led by Dimitri Berezniakov and a dedicated team, we aim to make international relationships more transparent, one verified profile at a time.

Online dating should create genuine connections — not heartbreak and financial loss. Awareness is your first and strongest line of defense.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

What is the Scammer Blacklist?

It’s a freely accessible, user-powered database of suspected dating scammers, mainly from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, and nearby countries. User-submitted reports are intended to help others avoid similar fraud.

No. They reflect user experiences and are not independently confirmed. Appearance in this list does not mean the person is proven guilty.

Yes — if the woman is already in our AppleStay or webcam databases, verification is completely free.
More detailed identity checks or investigations are optional paid services.

New reports are added as they are received, usually several times per week.

Be skeptical of anyone asking for money or who avoids video calls. Look for inconsistencies, perform image searches, and use our free verification before trusting or sending money.

Yes. If a report about you or someone you know is false, contact us with proof of identity. We’ll review and remove the entry if appropriate.

You can share names, countries, dating platforms, photos, and a brief story of your interaction.
Screenshots and links help others recognize similar scams.

We cooperate with authorities upon request, while following all privacy and data protection standards.

Absolutely. We never publish your contact details. Only the scam-related information you choose to provide becomes public.

Most reports come from these regions due to established dating agency networks and large-scale scam operations. Our aim is awareness — not generalization.

Romance Scammers: Final Note

The Scammer Blacklist 2026 was built by people for people. Take a moment to check-or better yet, verify-who’s really behind the screen before you fall in love online.

It’s that simple: If something feels off, trust your instincts. You can check our list, run a free verification, or share your story to help someone else avoid the same trap.

Being alert doesn’t mean losing hope in online dating; it simply means being wiser with whom you put your trust in. And that’s where this blacklist comes in.