Scammed on Facebook Marketplace? Why "Friends & Family" Killed Your Refund

The single trick behind most Marketplace payment scams: getting you off protected checkout and onto Friends & Family, Zelle, or Cash App, which carry no buyer protection.
Quick answer: If you paid on Facebook Marketplace using "Friends and Family" on PayPal, Zelle, or a similar person-to-person transfer, there is no buyer protection, and that is exactly why scammers ask for it. Report the listing and the seller to Facebook, then report the payment method (PayPal, your bank for Zelle) and file at reportfraud.ftc.gov. If you paid with "Goods and Services," you have a real dispute path, use it.
The single trick behind almost every Marketplace payment scam is getting you off the platform's protected checkout and onto a payment method with no dispute process. Once you understand that split, you can spot the scam before you pay.
The payment split that decides everything
| Payment type | Buyer protection |
|---|---|
| PayPal Goods & Services, a credit card, or Facebook Checkout | Yes. You can file a dispute or chargeback if the item never arrives or is not as described. |
| PayPal Friends & Family, Zelle, Cash App, Venmo (personal), cash, gift cards, wire | No. These are treated as sending money to someone you know. There is no seller-fraud dispute process. |
A stranger asking you to use the second column is the scam, whatever story comes with it: "it's cheaper for me," "Goods and Services has fees," or "I only take Zelle."
Common Marketplace scam patterns
- The insists-on-F&F seller. A too-good price, then a request to pay via Friends and Family, Zelle, or Cash App "to avoid fees."
- The fake-shipping seller. They ask you to pay upfront for an item to be "shipped," then disappear.
- The overpayment buyer. A buyer "accidentally" sends too much and asks you to refund the difference, before their original payment reverses or turns out to be fake.
- The off-platform link. You are asked to complete payment on a site outside Facebook or PayPal that mimics a real checkout page.
What to do if you were scammed
- Report the listing and the profile to Facebook Marketplace directly.
- Contact the payment provider. If you used PayPal Goods and Services or a card, open a dispute immediately. Friends and Family, Zelle, and Cash App have no seller dispute path, but report the fraud to the app or your bank anyway; funds may occasionally be recoverable if reported fast.
- File at reportfraud.ftc.gov and, for a significant loss, at ic3.gov.
- Keep the listing screenshots, chat history, and payment confirmation as evidence.
How to avoid it next time
Buy and pay through PayPal Goods and Services or Facebook Checkout whenever the seller allows it, even if they push back. Meet in person for local cash deals only after inspecting the item, and never wire money or send gift cards to a stranger online, regardless of the reason given.
Frequently asked questions
I paid with Zelle. Can I get my money back? There is no seller-dispute path on Zelle, since it is designed for sending money to people you trust. Report it to your bank and file with the FTC and FBI anyway; recovery is not guaranteed but reporting fast is your best chance.
Why do scammers push Friends and Family? Because it removes buyer protection entirely. It is the single biggest tell of a Marketplace payment scam.
Is Facebook Checkout safer than a P2P app? Yes, but only when the checkout and payment actually happen on Facebook. If a "seller" sends you to an outside link to "complete checkout," Facebook's purchase protection does not apply, even if the page looks official.
The seller sent too much money and wants a refund. Is this safe? No. This is the overpayment scam; the original payment is often fake or will be reversed after you refund the "extra."
Where do I report a Marketplace scam? Report the listing to Facebook, the payment method to its provider, and the fraud to reportfraud.ftc.gov.
If you have lost money to a scam, you are not alone. See our cybercrime help hub for step-by-step reporting and recovery guides.