McAfee Labs reveals more than 36,000 fake Amazon sites leading up to Prime Day
Team L&M
McAfee, a global leader in online protection, released its 2025 Global Prime Day Scams Study, revealing concerns about how scammers are using AI-powered technology to deceive Prime Day shoppers. McAfee Labs has identified over 36,000 fake Amazon websites and 75,000 Amazon impersonation texts designed to exploit the buzz of this event and steal shoppersโ personal information and financial details.
The study was conducted online in last month (June 2025). Over 5,000 adults in the US, UK, France, Germany, and India, age 18 and beyond, participated in the study.
This year, 96% of Indians say they plan to shop online during Prime Day 2025, making it a major opportunity for both retailers and scammers. As per McAfee study, while 97% plan to take specific steps to stay safe while shopping online, 71% say they are more concerned about AI-generated scams during prime day or any other major retail event. That concern is precisely what scammers are exploiting, with AI making it easier than ever to create more sophisticated and convincing shopping scams.
Top scams this Prime Day include fake Amazon websites, deepfakes of influencers who appear to sell or endorse products, and a surge in Amazon notification texts โ from deliveries, to refunds, to tariff charges โ Amazon impersonation text messages are designed with urgency to pressure people to click before they think.
โIndian shoppers, who embrace online deals and social platforms, are increasingly falling prey to scams driven by urgency and persuasion,โ said Pratim Mukherjee, Senior Director of Engineering, McAfee. โPrime Day is a time of excitement for Indian shoppers, but it has also become a prime target for scammers using AI to create hyper-personalized, convincing attacks that push people to click before they think. While many shoppers are taking precautions, the rise of AI-powered scams makes it more important than ever to stay vigilant,โ add the McAfee official.
Big Sale Events โ Hot Spot for Scammers
Indiaโs vibrant online shopping landscape is both a lucrative market for retailers and a hunting ground for scammers. 39% of people say they or someone they know has seen or received a deepfake scam (involving deepfake content or a fake celebrity endorsement) during a major sale event like Prime Day. Alarmingly, among those affected, many reported losing more than INR 40,000 to such scams.
Additionally, 81% of consumers have reported receiving suspicious messages, including โlimited-time dealโ scams (48%), bogus delivery updates (31%) and fake discount codes or flash sale offers (28%). Younger shoppers, particularly those aged 18โ24, are frequent targets, with fake Prime membership renewal reminders, and phishing texts exploiting their openness to deals. 33% of consumers say the fear of scams has stopped them from completing purchases, highlighting the urgent need for smarter protection tools during major sale events like Prime Day.
Scroll, Shop, Scammed!
96% of Indians say they shop online, especially for clothes and electronics. 7% say they do so almost daily, 21% a few times per week, 16% once a week, 33% two to three times per month, and 17% once a month or less.
While older adults (65+) tend to be more cautious, younger shoppers are far more likely to take risks on unfamiliar brands โ especially on social media. 32% of 18โ34-year-olds say they frequently see ads from unfamiliar retailers and are willing to buy from them if the deal looks good.ย Younger shoppers (18โ24 and 25โ34) report the highest scam exposure, with 17% and 13%, respectively, saying they’ve been scammed during Prime Day or other major sale events. Scam rates decline with age, bottoming out at just 5% among adults 65+, who are more cautious and reluctant to buy online.
Scam Anxiety Meets Smart Protection
One in five people (20%) who fell victim to an online scam during Prime Day or another major retail event did not tell anyone, largely due to feelings of embarrassment and psychological distress. This highlights that the risks of online scams extend beyond financial loss, impacting shoppersโ confidence and emotional well-being.
Itโs not just what people buy โ itโs how and when they shop. 93% of shoppers report encountering ads from unfamiliar retailers on social media during big sale events, emphasizing the growing need for caution and proactive protection. The impact of these concerns is reflected in the 27% of shoppers who say they plan to shop less during Prime Day 2025 due to fears of scams, as well as the 21% who are worried about the safety of their financial and personal data.
But consumers arenโt powerless: nearly half (49%) say theyโd consider using a scam detection tool to add peace of mind to their Prime Day experience, and nearly a quarter (13%) say they absolutely would.
How to Protect Yourself this Prime Day
- Verify before you trust: Retailers are unlikely to call you about suspicious activity or unauthorized purchases. Always go directly to the source, such as the Amazon app, to check your account instead of trusting links in messages or unsolicited phone calls.
- Protect your shopping experience: Turn on two-factor authentication for extra account protection, use strong, unique passwords, shop only on secure websites (look for โhttps://โ and the padlock icon), monitor your bank and credit card statements for unusual charges, and go straight to the retailerโs site or app instead of clicking text or email links youโre not sure about.
- Watch for red flags: If a message pressures you to act fast, demands payment through gift cards or wire transfers, asks for personal info, or insists you stay on the line or keep quietโhit pause. These are classic scam signals. Taking a moment to think can be the difference between scoring a deal and walking into disaster.
- Use AI-powered scam protection: Use trusted tools like McAfeeโs Scam Detector, that spot and flag suspicious links and scams before they can do harm.
- Trust your instincts: If something feels off, or too good to be true, it probably is.