If an FG recruitment ad asks for money, uses fake websites, creates urgency, relies only on WhatsApp, or promises unrealistic salaries, it is likely a scam. Verify through official portals first.
Source: EduJobs Africa
Even I has also fell for this scam before that I paid ₦7,500 for what i believed was a Federal Government recruitment “processing fee.” The next morning, the WhatsApp number blocked me. No job. No refund. Wlh, Just shame and silence.
I have seen this happen too many times as well o. Smart people. Educated people. Desperate people.
That is why every Nigerian job seeker must learn how to identify fake FG recruitment ads before money, hope, and time are stolen.
Why So Many Nigerians Fall for These Scams
When unemployment is high and real openings are scarce, scammers know emotions are already hot. They use words like “urgent,” “massive recruitment,” “nationwide slots,” and “shortlisted names out now.”
They understand one painful truth: many applicants are tired.
After NYSC, after countless CV drops, after no replies, any message promising Federal Government jobs can look like answered prayer.
But real government recruitment does not behave like panic marketing.
Red Flag 1: They Ask You to Pay Money
This is the biggest sign.
Most legitimate FG recruitment processes do not ask candidates to pay application fees into personal accounts, POS agents, or random bank details. If somebody says pay for shortlist, form activation, exam centre slot, or file opening, step back immediately.
Real agencies usually announce procedures publicly through official portals.
As of my last check, always verify through the agency website or trusted government communication channels.
Red Flag 2: The Website Looks Strange
I once checked a fake portal pretending to be a federal agency. The domain ended with something random and had spelling errors everywhere.
Official Nigerian government websites commonly use domains like .gov.ng or clearly recognized official domains. If the site looks rushed, contains broken English, or asks for strange data, be careful.
Scammers copy logos. They cannot always copy credibility.
Red Flag 3: They Use Pressure Tactics
“Apply in 2 hours.”
“Last batch closes tonight.”
“Only serious candidates should pay now.”
That language is designed to stop you from thinking.
Real FG recruitment ads usually have clearer timelines, public notices, and reasonable deadlines. Government systems may be slow, but they are rarely running like flash sales.
Red Flag 4: Communication Happens Only on WhatsApp or Telegram
If the entire recruitment process lives inside a Telegram group or WhatsApp broadcast, be suspicious.
Some real agencies may share updates on social media, yes. But official applications are normally tied to recognized portals, public notices, or traceable channels.
If there is no website, no official press release, and no verifiable contact, don’t risk it.
Red Flag 5: The Salary Sounds Too Good to Be True
“SSCE holders needed. ₦450,000 monthly. No interview.”
That sentence alone should worry you.
Scammers know salary attracts attention. They inflate figures to make you ignore logic. Real public service jobs follow structured salary scales, grade levels, and defined entry requirements.
What Nobody Tells You
Many fake FG recruitment ads spread through friends and family.
Yes, someone you trust may forward it sincerely because they also believe it is real. So stop judging information by who sent it. Judge it by source, process, and proof.
That one lesson can save your account balance.
Practical Steps to Verify Any FG Recruitment Ad
- Search the official agency website directly.
- Check verified social media pages of the agency.
- Look for announcements in major Nigerian newspapers or trusted media.
- Never pay into personal bank accounts.
- Ask: does this process look professional or desperate?
- If unsure, wait and verify before applying.
Closing
If you are job hunting right now, I know the pressure. I know what it feels like to want one breakthrough message in your inbox.
But please remember this: desperation is expensive.
A fake FG recruitment ad can steal money, documents, and confidence. Protect yourself. Slow down. Verify first. The right opportunity does not need to trick you.