Scam Warnings

Amazon delivery scam: Packages you did not order showing up — here is why

If you've been receiving Amazon packages you didn't order, you're likely a target of a "brushing scam."

What is brushing?

  • A seller creates fake orders using your name and address
  • They ship cheap items (often from China) to verify the address
  • Then they post fake verified reviews under your name
  • It means your personal info has been compromised somewhere

What to do:

  1. Log into Amazon and check for unauthorized orders
  2. Change your Amazon password immediately
  3. Enable 2FA on your Amazon account
  4. Check your credit report — if they have your address, they may have more
  5. Report it to Amazon: amazon.com/gp/help/customer/contact-us
  6. Report to FTC: ReportFraud.ftc.gov

You can keep the items. FTC says unordered merchandise is legally yours. But the bigger concern is the data breach.

Source: FTC Consumer Advice, Amazon security team guidelines

This hit a bunch of people in my Flower Mound neighborhood last week. 6+ households on my street alone.

What do you think?

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Mar 29, 2026, 6:01 AM

3 Comments

Got three random packages last month. Two had cheap LED lights and one had a phone case. Changed all my passwords after reading about brushing.

u/taco_run_tx·

The scary part is not the packages, its that someone has your name and address. Check HaveIBeenPwned.com to see if your email was in any data breaches.

Happened to us in Plano. Amazon was actually helpful when we reported it. They traced it to a third-party seller who got banned.