Winter Scams in 2026 — What Actually Happened This Season

Winter Scams in 2026 — What Actually Happened This Season

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Winter 2026 brings more online shopping, deliveries, and urgent messages — creating the perfect environment for seasonal scams to blend into everyday digital activity.

Winter 2026 brought a surge of scams tied to deliveries, shopping, travel, charity appeals, and rising heating costs. What people encountered — and why the scams worked.

During winter, people juggle gift shopping, package tracking, travel plans, charitable giving, and rising energy costs — all at once. Notifications increase, inboxes grow crowded, and urgent messages begin to feel routine.

For scammers, this creates the perfect opportunity. They don’t choose targets randomly — they follow seasonal behavior.

This winter, fraud attempts blended into everyday activity so naturally that many people didn’t realize they were interacting with scams until after money or personal data had already been shared.

The main winter scam trends in 2026 included delivery and package notification scams, fake online shopping deals, heating and utility payment scams, charity donation scams, travel booking scams, and AI-enhanced scams.

This article looks back at the most common scams people encountered during Winter 2026, how they worked, and the biggest lessons this season taught us.

Why Scam Activity Rises During Winter

Winter creates ideal conditions for fraud:

  • more online purchases
  • more messages and notifications
  • financial pressure from holiday spending and heating costs
  • distractions caused by travel and busy schedules

Instead of inventing new tricks, scammers adapt familiar scams to seasonal expectations. A message about a package, a heating bill, or a travel booking feels believable because it fits the moment.

According to the Federal Trade Commission, fraud losses have continued to grow year after year, reflecting a steady rise in large-scale scam activity across the United States.

Person shopping online during winter while holding a credit card and using a laptop, representing seasonal online shopping and scam risks
Winter shopping, travel planning, and online payments increase digital activity — creating more opportunities for seasonal scams to appear as normal everyday messages.

The Winter Scams People Encountered Most in 2026

Here are the 6 most common winter 2026 scams:

1. Delivery and Package Notification Scams

Real case:

U.S. news outlets reported that during the holiday shipping rush, consumers received text messages pretending to be USPS, FedEx, or UPS, claiming a delivery problem required immediate action. Victims who clicked the link were taken to fake tracking websites designed to steal payment and personal information.

How the scam worked:

Scammers sent delivery alerts about address problems, unpaid postage, or shipment delays, making the messages look routine during busy holiday shipping periods.

Because many people were already waiting for packages, the messages felt legitimate.

How to stay safe:

Avoid clicking delivery links in unexpected messages. Instead, check shipment status directly through the retailer or the courier’s official website.

2. Fake Holiday Deals and Online Shopping Scams

Real case:

Holiday shopping investigations reported a surge of non-delivery scams in late 2025, where buyers completed purchases on professional-looking websites but never received their orders. Authorities identified these fake stores as one of the most common seasonal fraud tactics. 

How the scam worked:

Fraudulent websites copied real brands and appeared briefly online to collect payments.

The purchase process felt normal until the order failed to arrive.

How to stay safe:

Research unfamiliar stores before purchasing, avoid deals that seem unusually cheap, and pay using methods that offer buyer protection.

3. Heating and Utility Payment Scams

Real case:

The FTC warned in January 2026 that scammers used winter storms and heating disruptions to impersonate utility companies and pressure residents into urgent payments to restore services. Experts noted that seasonal stress significantly increased victim response rates.

How the scam worked:

Scammers impersonated utility companies or government assistance programs, asking victims to confirm payment details or submit banking information immediately. 

Fear of losing heat during winter made messages highly convincing.

How to stay safe:

Avoid paying utility bills through links in texts or emails and contact your energy provider directly using official contact details.

4. Charity and Donation Scams

Real case:

Holiday-season fraud monitoring in December 2025 documented an increase in fake charitable appeals using emotional messaging and urgent donation requests. Many campaigns disappeared shortly after collecting funds from well-meaning donors.

How the scam worked:

Criminals created convincing websites, social media posts, or email campaigns that appeared connected to real causes, emergencies, or community support efforts. 

Urgent messages emphasized limited-time fundraising goals or immediate needs, pushing people to donate before verifying legitimacy. 

How to stay safe:

Donate only through verified charity websites and confirm organizations using trusted charity-verification services.

5. Travel and Vacation Booking Scams

Real case:

Bloomberg reported a case where a rushed traveler searching online for airline customer support called a scam number. Believing she was speaking with airline staff, she paid a rebooking fee to a business impersonator.

How the scam worked:

Scammers impersonated legitimate airlines or travel support services and intercepted travelers during stressful moments such as delays or urgent rebooking situations.

Victims often realized the fraud only after suspicious confirmations appeared or real airline staff confirmed no changes had been made.

How to stay safe:

Always contact airlines through official apps or saved phone numbers — not search results, ads, or unsolicited messages. 

6. AI-Enhanced Scams

Real case:

The New Haven Register reported that in early 2026, police warned about criminals using AI-generated images and videos to stage fake kidnappings and demand ransom payments. Authorities said scammers scraped photos from social media to create convincing but entirely fabricated evidence

How the scam worked:

Artificial intelligence allowed scammers to create realistic proof-of-life messages and impersonations.

The emotional shock pushed victims to act before verifying facts.

How to stay safe:

Always confirm emergencies through direct contact with loved ones before sending money.

What These Winter Scams Had in Common

Across every category, the same strategy appeared again and again:

  • urgency pushed people to act quickly
  • messages appeared to come from famous brands or official institutions
  • requests often started with small payments to build trust
  • texts arrived exactly when people expected them

Scammers didn’t need complex technology. They relied on timing.

Winter activities created predictable opportunities — and fraud followed those opportunities.

Federal investigators note that most successful scams rely less on hacking and more on psychological pressure, impersonation, and well-timed messages.

What Winter 2026 Has Taught Us About Online Scams

The scam activity seen this winter is not over — many of these tactics remain ongoing and relevant today.

The biggest lesson from this season is simple:

Scams follow human behavior.

  1. When people shop, scammers create fake stores.
  2. When people travel, scammers create fake bookings.
  3. When heating bills rise, scammers send utility warnings.

Technology evolves, but the psychology behind scams remains consistent.

Recognizing seasonal patterns makes future scams easier to spot before they succeed.

Futureproof alerts you to digital risks and helps keep your accounts protected. Get started today to stay protected all year long.

Key Takeaway: Scams Follow Behavior, Not Technology

Winter 2026 didn’t introduce entirely new scams. Instead, it showed how fraud adapts to everyday routines.

The most successful scams didn’t look unusual — they looked familiar.

That’s the real lesson: fraud rarely begins with something obviously suspicious. It starts with a message that fits perfectly into daily life.

Recognizing timing is often more important than recognizing technology. If a message creates urgency during a busy moment, that pressure itself may be the warning sign.

Awareness doesn’t mean avoiding technology or online services. It means pausing when something feels routine but demands immediate action.

The safest habit isn’t knowing every scam. It’s learning to slow down when urgency appears.