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Protect your home · May 27, 2026

Romance Scams Are Quietly Costing Older Homeowners Their Homes

If an online “relationship” led to lost savings and now your home feels at risk, please hear this: the shame you may feel is real, but what happened to you is a crime — not a personal failing.

By Chris Moore · Foreclosure Fighters · May 27, 2026

A calm, private conversation about protecting your home and finances
A calm, private conversation about protecting your home and finances

A growing kind of fraud called “pig butchering” blends a fake romance with a fake investment. The scammer builds trust over weeks, then steers the victim into a phony crypto platform that shows fake “profits” — until the money is gone.

One recent story

In 2025, a widow in her 70s in San Jose believed she had met someone online. Over time, a scammer who called himself “Ed” — who would never meet in person and insisted the relationship stay secret — guided her into wiring money into a crypto “investment.” She watched fake profits appear within seconds and was told to send more. She ultimately lost close to $1 million, drained her retirement account (leaving a large tax bill), and reportedly could lose her home. Her story, reported by ABC7 News, is sadly common.

What the numbers say

According to the FBI's 2025 Internet Crime Report, Americans age 60 and older lost $7.75 billion to cybercrime — a 59% jump over the prior year. The average older victim lost about $38,500, and more than 12,400 lost over $100,000 each. Confidence and romance scams alone cost older victims about $584 million.

How homes get pulled in: victims are often coached to “invest more” by tapping a HELOC, a cash-out refinance, a reverse mortgage, or retirement savings. When the money vanishes, the loan payments — and sometimes the home — are suddenly at risk.

How to protect yourself or a parent

  • Never send money — especially crypto or wires — to someone you haven't met in person, no matter how real the relationship feels.
  • Be suspicious of secrecy and urgency. “Don't tell your family” is a giant red flag.
  • Talk to someone before tapping home equity. A quick call to a trusted family member, a HUD counselor, or an attorney can stop a catastrophe.
  • Report it at the FBI's IC3.gov, and call the 24/7 Homeowner's HOPE Hotline (888-995-HOPE) if your mortgage is now at risk.

If a scam has already put your home in jeopardy and you've fallen behind, please know there are still options — reinstatement, a repayment plan, or a modification, and if needed, selling before a foreclosure sale to protect your remaining equity. We'll help you understand them, with no pressure and no judgment.

This is a sensitive subject. If you or someone you love is dealing with the aftermath of fraud and financial distress, you don't have to face it alone — reach out to us, a trusted person, or a HUD-approved counselor for support.

Please note: This article is general information for Northeast Florida homeowners, not legal, financial, or tax advice. Every situation is different. Always confirm your specific options and deadlines with a licensed Florida attorney and a HUD-approved housing counselor (1-800-569-4287). Read our full disclosures →

Sources

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