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Official Resources5 min readFeb 12, 2026

How to Report Cyber Fraud in India — 1930 Helpline & NCRP Guide

Step-by-step: what to do in the first hour after a scam

#1930#NCRP#cyber fraud#reporting#helpline
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If you've been scammed on a dating app — whether it's a bill trap, financial fraud, or blackmail — the most important thing you can do is act fast. India has a dedicated cybercrime reporting system, and the first hour after a scam is when intervention is most effective, especially for financial fraud where transactions can potentially be frozen.

Step 1: Call 1930 Immediately

1930 is India's national cybercrime helpline, operated by the Ministry of Home Affairs. It's available 24/7, toll-free, and staffed by officers trained in cyber fraud. When you call, provide: a clear description of what happened, the phone number or profile of the scammer (screenshots help), any transaction details (UPI ID, bank account, payment amounts), and the dating app where you matched. The operator will create a ticket and, for financial fraud, can initiate a hold request on the transaction. This is why speed matters — once money moves through multiple accounts, recovery becomes nearly impossible.

Step 2: File on the NCRP Portal

After calling 1930, file a formal complaint on the National Cyber Crime Reporting Portal at cybercrime.gov.in. Click "File a Complaint," select the relevant category (financial fraud, women/child-related crime, or other cybercrime), and fill in the details. You'll receive a complaint number — save this. The portal complaint creates an official record that can be used for investigation and is linked to the 1930 system. Upload any screenshots, chat exports, or payment receipts you have.

Step 3: File a Local Police FIR

Visit your nearest police station and file a First Information Report (FIR). Bring your NCRP complaint number and any evidence. Under Indian law, police are required to register an FIR for cognizable offences — if they refuse, you can approach the Superintendent of Police or file a complaint with the State Human Rights Commission. For dating app scams, relevant sections include IPC 420 (cheating), IPC 384 (extortion), and provisions under the IT Act 2000.

Why People Don't Report (and Why You Should)

We understand the hesitation. Reporting a dating scam means admitting you were on a dating app, describing an embarrassing situation, and dealing with bureaucracy when you'd rather forget the whole thing. But here's why it matters: every report adds to the pattern. Police have busted entire scam networks — in Delhi alone, multiple operations have been shut down — because enough victims reported. Your report might be the one that triggers an investigation. And practically speaking, an FIR is necessary if you want to dispute charges with your bank or pursue legal action later. You don't have to share the report with anyone in your personal life.

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