How the grandparent call works
An imposter calls an older parent, claims to be a grandchild in trouble, and asks for money before the parent has a chance to verify. It is the most-reported variant of the AI voice clone scam against grandparents in the United States.
The call usually opens with a few seconds of crying or a whispered emergency. The voice is often built from a clip pulled off social media. Three seconds is enough to clone a working voice. The clone does not need to be perfect; it only needs to hold for the first minute, while the parent is still off balance.
According to the FTC Consumer Sentinel Network, imposter scams were the most-reported fraud category in 2024, with reported losses exceeding $2.95 billion. Three seconds of audio is all it takes walks through how the cloning step actually happens.
What to listen for
- The call opens with high-stakes emotion. A real grandchild is more likely to give you context first; an imposter leads with the panic.
- The script avoids your name. A clone is built from voice, not memory. It can sound like your grandchild and still not call you by the name they normally use.
- The location detail is fuzzy. Ask twice where they are. The answer often shifts.
- The caller refuses a callback. Any reason to stay on the line and not let you dial back is a tell.
- The money ask is unusual. Gift cards, wire transfers, crypto, or a courier on the way are the common four.
Scripts families have reported
"Grandma? It's me. I'm in trouble. Please don't tell Mom. I had an accident and I need help."
"I can't talk long. They only let me make one call. I need you to send money so I can come home."
The exact words vary. The shape does not: a frightened opening, a request not to involve another family member, and a money ask that closes within the first three minutes.
What to do
- Ask for the family story.
- If the caller cannot say it, hang up.
- Call the person back on a number you already have in your phone.
- If anything else feels off, dial the hotline number on the fridge card. A real person picks up.