Romance Scams in 2026: How AI Is Supercharging the World's Most Heartbreaking Fraud, and How to Spot It

Romance scams cost victims hundreds of millions a year, and AI now writes the love letters, fakes the photos, and even joins the video calls. Drawing on the FBI, FTC, INTERPOL, the UK and Australia, here is how the modern romance scam works, why so many victims stay silent, and the red flags that give it away.
The romance scam is the cruelest fraud there is, because it steals trust before it steals money. And in 2026 it has a powerful new accomplice: artificial intelligence now generates the photos, writes the tender messages, clones voices, and can even put a fake face on a video call. The result is a scam that is harder to detect and easier to run at scale than ever before. Here is how it works now, the numbers behind it, and the red flags that still give it away.
How the modern romance scam works
It begins with contact: a match on a dating app, a friendly direct message, or a "wrong number" text that turns into conversation. Over days and weeks the scammer builds an intense bond, often professing love quickly, then steers you off the platform to a private chat. They are always warm, always attentive, and always unable to meet in person, with a steady supply of reasons: working abroad, serving in the military, stuck on an oil rig, caught in a sudden emergency. Once the emotional hook is set, the requests for money begin, or, increasingly, the conversation pivots to a "great investment" you can make together.
When the romance becomes an "investment"
The fastest-growing version blends romance with fake crypto investing. The scammer, having won your trust, introduces a trading platform or app showing handsome profits, and encourages you to invest more and more until you try to withdraw and find it was all fake. INTERPOL has documented this hybrid as a major global threat and now urges people to call it "romance baiting" rather than the older, victim-blaming slang, precisely because shame keeps victims silent. The FBI's dedicated effort against it, Operation Level Up, has identified thousands of victims and says it has prevented hundreds of millions in further losses by warning people mid-scam.
What AI changed
Generative AI has removed the old tells. The FBI warns that criminals now use AI to create large numbers of convincing fake profiles, produce realistic photos of people who do not exist, clone voices to sound like a love interest or relative, and even generate deepfake video for "live" calls. The grammar mistakes and stock photos that once exposed a scammer are disappearing. That is exactly why a verification habit, rather than gut feeling about how genuine someone seems, is now your real defence.
A worldwide toll
This is a global epidemic with the same shape everywhere. In the United Kingdom, regulators recorded around £106 million in romance-fraud losses across roughly 9,449 reports in 2024/25, with an average loss of more than £11,000 per victim. In Australia, the national anti-scam centre put combined romance-scam losses at $139.9 million across its reporting agencies. In Singapore, where overall scam losses actually fell to about S$913 million in 2025, internet love scams still cost victims around S$24.9 million. Different countries, identical heartbreak.
The red flags that still work
AI has not changed the underlying pattern. According to the US FTC, these signs should stop you cold:
- They can never meet in person, and there is always a fresh excuse (overseas job, military deployment, sudden crisis).
- They profess strong feelings very fast, often within days, while still a stranger.
- They move you off the dating app quickly, to private messaging where there is no oversight.
- They eventually ask for money, or steer you into an investment, especially crypto, gift cards, or a wire transfer.
- Their photos do not check out. Run a reverse image search of their profile pictures; stolen or AI-generated images often surface elsewhere or nowhere at all.
The single safest rule: never send money, gifts, or crypto to someone you have only met online, no matter how real the relationship feels.
Why so many stay silent
Romance-scam losses are almost certainly far higher than any figure above, because so few victims come forward. An AARP study in 2026 found that 55% of victims aged 50 and over never reported what happened, with shame the most common reason. If it happens to you or someone you love, reporting is not embarrassing; it is how the money is traced and the next victim is protected.
If you have been targeted
Stop contact, do not send anything more, and report it. Move quickly through your bank and the official channels in our guide to the first 24 hours after a scam. If the relationship pivoted into crypto "investing," read how that specific trap works in our explainer on how romance-baiting investment scams drain life savings. And remember: being deceived by a professional manipulator is not a failing on your part.
Frequently asked questions
How do I know if I am talking to a romance scammer? The biggest signs are that they cannot meet in person, profess love quickly, push you off the dating app, and eventually ask for money or steer you into an investment. Reverse-image-search their photos.
Can AI really fake a video call? Yes. The FBI warns scammers now use deepfake video and cloned voices, so a convincing call is no longer proof someone is who they claim. Verify through independent means.
Is "pig butchering" the same as a romance scam? It is the version that pivots a romance into a fake crypto investment. INTERPOL now prefers the term "romance baiting" to avoid blaming victims.
I sent money to someone I never met. What should I do? Stop all contact, tell your bank immediately, and report it. Acting fast gives the best chance of tracing funds, and reporting helps protect others.
Sources
- FBI IC3 2025 Annual Report (confidence/romance fraud losses)
- FBI IC3 PSA: generative AI in financial fraud (Dec 2024)
- INTERPOL: 'romance baiting' over 'pig butchering' (Dec 2024)
- US FTC: What To Know About Romance Scams (red flags)
- AARP: romance-scam under-reporting research (Feb 2026)
- UK FCA: romance-fraud losses 2024/25