Email Safety·March 23, 2026·4 min read

Every single day, millions of phishing emails land in inboxes around the world. These carefully crafted fake emails impersonate your bank, Amazon, PayPal, or Netflix — with one goal: to steal your personal information, passwords, or money.

The good news? Once you know what to look for, phishing emails are surprisingly easy to spot. Here are the 10 warning signs every person should know.

Person checking email carefully on laptop screen
Always inspect emails carefully before clicking any links — the sender address is the most reliable warning sign

The sender’s email address looks wrong

This is the single most reliable way to identify a phishing email. Scammers use display names that look completely legitimate — “PayPal Customer Service” — but the actual email address behind that name tells a completely different story.

Always tap or hover on the sender name to reveal the real address. A genuine PayPal email will always come from @paypal.com. If it ends in @paypal-secure-login.com or @gmail.com — it is fake, no exceptions.

Quick check: On your phone, tap the sender name at the top of the email. The real email address appears directly underneath it.

Sense of urgency or panic

Phishing emails are engineered to make you act before you have time to think. Watch for phrases like “Your account has been suspended — act immediately” or “Unusual activity detected — verify your identity now”. Legitimate companies do not create panic to force clicks.

Spelling mistakes and odd grammar

Professional companies proofread every customer communication. Phishing emails frequently contain multiple spelling mistakes, awkward phrasing, or sentences that do not read naturally. Read the email out loud — if anything sounds off, treat the whole thing with suspicion.

Generic greeting

Your bank knows your name. Any company you genuinely have an account with will address you personally — not “Dear Customer” or “Dear Account Holder”. A generic greeting is a clear sign the message was mass-sent to thousands of addresses at once.

Before clicking anything, hover over links to preview their destination. A real Amazon link points to amazon.com. A fake one might point to amazon-account-verify.net or amaz0n.com. Look for misspellings, extra words, or unusual domain extensions.

Golden rule: If an email asks you to log into anything, open a new browser tab and type the website address yourself. Never click the link in the email. This one habit eliminates most phishing risk.
Cybersecurity warning shield concept
Knowing all 10 warning signs means you can spot and report phishing emails before any damage is done

An unexpected attachment

If you were not expecting a file, do not open it. Phishing attachments disguise themselves as invoices or shipping confirmations. Be especially cautious of .exe, .zip, .docm, and .xlsm files.

It asks for personal information

No legitimate company will ever ask you for your password, full credit card number, or PIN by email — ever. If an email requests this information, regardless of how convincing it looks, do not provide it.

Remember: Real companies never ask for your password via email. If unsure, call the company directly using the number from their official website.

Email from a free email service

Your bank does not send security alerts from barclays_support@gmail.com. Genuine business communications always come from professional email domains matching the company name exactly.

Offer seems too good to be true

You have won a competition you never entered. You are owed a tax refund. A wealthy stranger needs your urgent help. If an email offers something that defies belief — it does not believe in you either.

Something feels off

Trust your instincts. If something about an email makes you uneasy — a slightly wrong logo, an unusual tone, a domain name that is almost correct — that feeling is worth taking seriously. Scammers work hard to create urgency to override your better judgement.

What to do when you receive one

Phishing emails depend on panic and inattention. Now that you know all ten warning signs, take three seconds to check the sender address on every email that asks you to do something — that one habit will protect you from the vast majority of phishing attacks.

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MyTechGuard Team
Cybersecurity Writers & Researchers

We translate complex cybersecurity topics into plain English so everyday people can protect themselves online — no technical background required.

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