Investment Scams in Lithuania
Unlicensed brokers and fake funds pitch Lithuanian investors guaranteed returns through ads and cold calls, then block withdrawals behind invented fees.
Part of: Investment Scams
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026
Investment scams in Lithuania target savers seeking better returns than low-interest deposits. Fraudsters advertise online or cold-call with promises of guaranteed profits from forex, commodities, or 'pre-IPO' shares, often cloning the names of reputable firms and exploiting the country's reputation as a fintech centre.
The pitch leans on professionalism: Lithuanian-language brochures, a polished portal, and claims of Bank of Lithuania supervision. Once money is deposited, fictitious profits appear, but every withdrawal is blocked behind a new fee.
How this scam works on Lithuania
A victim responds to a targeted advert or takes a call from a confident 'adviser' offering an exclusive fund or trading account. They are shown Lithuanian-language materials and a dashboard of steady gains, then encouraged to top up repeatedly, sometimes moving money from genuine savings.
The operator may claim Bank of Lithuania authorisation or display a cloned licence number belonging to a real fintech firm. When the victim tries to withdraw, they must first pay a tax, conversion fee, or release charge — each a fresh demand rather than a route to their funds.
Eventually contact ends and the portal disappears, the deposits already moved abroad through layered transfers.
Common red flags
- Promises of guaranteed or unusually high returns with little stated risk
- Cold calls or adverts urging you to act before an 'exclusive window' closes
- Claimed Bank of Lithuania supervision you cannot confirm on the official register
- A firm using a known company's name but with different contact details
- Pressure to move money out of regulated savings into the scheme
- Withdrawals blocked behind taxes, conversion fees, or release charges
- Account managers who become evasive when asked for documentation
How to protect yourself
- Verify every firm and adviser against the Bank of Lithuania register and EU warning lists
- Be sceptical of any guaranteed return — genuine investments carry risk
- Never act on cold calls or pop-up adverts pushing time-limited offers
- Refuse to pay any fee to release your own funds — that is a hallmark of fraud
- Consult an independent licensed Lithuanian adviser before moving savings
- Confirm contact details through the official company website, not the caller
How to report it
- Report the scheme to the Bank of Lithuania, which supervises financial firms
- File a report with the Lithuanian Police via 112
- Notify your bank so further transfers can be blocked or recalled
Frequently asked questions
How do I check if an investment firm is authorised in Lithuania?
Use the Bank of Lithuania register of authorised firms and the ESMA warnings list, matching the company name, address, and licence number exactly. Scammers often clone the details of genuine licensed firms, so verify through the firm's own official channels rather than the caller's.