Investigations by major news organizations in 2025 found that Meta's advertising platforms (Facebook and Instagram) are serving an unprecedented volume of fraudulent advertisements — investment scams, fake product ads, impersonation of celebrities and brands, and more.

How Scam Ads Work on Meta

Scammers use Meta's powerful ad targeting tools to reach specific demographics — often elderly users in English-speaking countries. They use stolen images of celebrities, news anchors, or trusted brands to create convincing ads for fake investment opportunities, miracle health products, or too-good-to-be-true deals.

Common Scam Ad Types

  • Celebrity investment scams — Fake endorsements from Elon Musk, Warren Buffett, or local news personalities promoting crypto investments.
  • Product scams — Ads for products that look legitimate but are never delivered.
  • Government impersonation — Fake ads claiming you qualify for a government grant or benefit.
  • Subscription traps — "Free trial" ads that automatically charge your card monthly.

How to Protect Yourself from Scam Ads

  1. Be skeptical of any ad promising extraordinary returns — If it promises guaranteed profits, it's a scam.
  2. Never click an ad and enter payment details — Go directly to the official website instead.
  3. Reverse image search celebrity photos — Most fake ads use stolen images that will appear in other contexts.
  4. Report scam ads — Click the three dots on any Meta ad and select "Report Ad."
  5. Enable two-factor authentication on all social media accounts to prevent account takeover used to run scam ads.

Sources: Tech investigative reports by major news organizations, 2025; Meta Transparency Reports; FTC.