For families with older parents
Help your parents pause before they send money
Scammers target older adults every day, and the calls are built to rush them. Set up a simple printable plan together in one afternoon, then stop worrying every time their phone rings.
- A family safe wordSo they can confirm who is really calling before they act.
- One simple ruleNo money leaves the house before it is verified with you.
- A card by the phoneThe exact steps to follow, right where they take the call.
The moments this protects them from
If any of these reaches your parent, the kit gives them the words to say and the steps to take before any money moves.
A caller says a grandchild is in trouble and needs money right now.
Someone claims to be their bank and asks them to move money to a "safe account."
A voice on the phone asks for gift cards, a wire, or payment to avoid a problem.
A text about a package, a toll, or an account asks them to tap a link.
A stranger pressures them to act now and not tell the family.
They are not sure if a call is real and need a simple way to check.
If you think your parent is too sharp to be fooled
It's not about being smart
Scams do not work by catching foolish people. They work by catching careful, intelligent people on a busy day, in about thirty seconds, with a story built to rush them. The sharpest person you know can be fooled by the right call at the wrong moment. Being targeted is not a failure. Being unprepared is the only part you can change.
That is all this kit is: a calm plan you set up once, so no one in your family has to figure it out alone in the moment.
Set up their plan30-day money-back guarantee
Try the kit with nothing to lose. If it isn't useful for protecting your family or your business, email us within 30 days and we'll refund you in full. No forms, no hassle.
A real person answers, usually within one business day.
ScamShield Kit provides educational information only. It is not legal, financial, cybersecurity, or law-enforcement advice. It reduces risk but cannot prevent all scams. If you are targeted or defrauded, contact your bank or payment provider and the appropriate authorities (in the U.S., the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and FBI IC3 at ic3.gov). Written for customers in the United States; reporting steps and resources may differ elsewhere.