ScamScouter safety guide
Microsoft Scam Email Checker
Microsoft phishing emails often mention password expiry, Microsoft 365 login, OneDrive sharing, account security or unusual sign-in activity. The goal is usually to steal your login details.
Paste the suspicious Microsoft email, sender address or link below before you sign in.
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Common Microsoft phishing messages
- password expiring today;
- mailbox storage full;
- OneDrive file shared with you;
- unusual sign-in detected;
- account will be disabled unless you verify.
What to check
Look at the sender domain, the destination URL and whether the page is actually Microsoft. Do not enter your password on a link from an unexpected email.
If you entered your password
Change it immediately through the official Microsoft site, enable multi-factor authentication and review account activity.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are Microsoft security emails always real?
No. Scammers often impersonate Microsoft security alerts.
How do I verify a Microsoft login page?
Open Microsoft directly by typing the official domain or using your app, not through the email link.
What should I do after entering my password on a fake page?
Change the password immediately and enable multi-factor authentication.
Related checks
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