UK households face a growing threat from a sophisticated brushing scam involving unsolicited mystery parcels. Security experts highlight the surge in this fraud, where scammers exploit stolen personal details to dispatch products and inflate online ratings with fake verified reviews.
What is a Brushing Scam?
Brushing scams target unsuspecting individuals by sending unordered packages to their addresses. Scammers first register a bogus buyer account using the victim’s name and details. They then ship low-value items to create the illusion of a legitimate purchase, enabling them to post seemingly authentic ‘verified buyer’ reviews that boost product rankings.
How the Scam Operates
To qualify as a verified review on major platforms, sellers must deliver goods to the purported buyer. Fraudsters capitalize on this by mailing cheap products, often mass-produced trinkets or apparel, to victims. These counterfeit endorsements, sometimes purchased, propel items up search results, tricking shoppers into buying overpriced, substandard goods.
Expert Warnings on Risks
Oliver Devane, a security specialist at McAfee, emphasizes the dangers: “The goods must reach the customer for a purchase and review to verify. If it’s a small toy for your child, you have no idea of its quality, origin, or contents—which poses a significant risk.”
Prevalent Platforms and Real Examples
This scam thrives on marketplaces like Amazon, eBay, and Temu, where high ratings dominate top search spots and drive sales. Users report receiving repeated deliveries, such as boxes of children’s clothing or dishwashing cloths, explaining encounters with suspiciously well-reviewed yet poorly made items.
Households receiving unexpected parcels should inspect contents cautiously, avoid using linked accounts, and report incidents to platform authorities and local police to curb this escalating fraud.

