Fake FedEx Websites
1 domains flagged by threat-intelligence feeds for impersonating FedEx. Most recent listing: May 6, 2026.
How to spot a fake FedEx site
- • Check the domain against FedEx's official address. Look-alike domains add extra words, hyphens, or unusual extensions.
- • Never log in via a link from an email or text. Navigate to the official site directly.
- • Use a password manager — it will not autofill your FedEx credentials on a look-alike domain.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I tell a real FedEx website from a fake one?
Always check the domain in the address bar against FedEx's official domain. Impersonation sites use look-alike domains (extra words, hyphens, or unusual extensions). Never enter your FedEx login or payment details on a site you reached from an email or text link — navigate to the official site directly instead.
I entered my FedEx details on one of these sites. What should I do?
Change your FedEx password immediately from a device you trust, and change it anywhere you reused it. Enable two-factor authentication. If you entered card or banking details, contact your bank to freeze or reissue the card, and watch your statements for unauthorized charges.
How are these domains identified as impersonating FedEx?
Each domain on this page was flagged by an upstream threat-intelligence source (URLhaus, OpenPhish, or PhishTank) and contains a FedEx brand reference in a non-official domain, or was reported by that feed as targeting FedEx. See our methodology page for full detail.
How do I report a fake FedEx website?
Report phishing sites to the Anti-Phishing Working Group at reportphishing@apwg.org, to Google Safe Browsing, and to FedEx's official abuse channel. You can also submit it on RecentScam using the Report button.
Stop the next phishing attack before you click.
NordPass autofill only triggers on real domains. Fake login pages cannot trick it into entering your credentials.