Pig-Butchering Scams in Lithuania
Long-con crypto investment fraud targets Lithuanian victims through dating apps and messaging, building trust before steering them into fake trading platforms.
Part of: Pig-Butchering Scams
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026
Pig-butchering scams have grown in Lithuania as cryptocurrency interest spreads and the country builds a reputation as a fintech hub. Fraudsters spend weeks building a romantic or friendly online relationship before introducing a supposedly unmissable trading opportunity on a platform they secretly control.
Lithuanian victims are reassured by professional apps showing Lithuanian-language interfaces and apparent regulatory badges, sometimes referencing the country's e-money and fintech licensing. The fraud combines emotional manipulation with financial loss, and victims who invest savings or loans can suffer serious harm.
How this scam works on Lithuania
Contact usually starts with a stranger matching on a dating app or messaging a Lithuanian number 'by mistake', then moving to WhatsApp or Telegram. After weeks of rapport, the scammer describes steady crypto profits and offers to mentor the victim through a trading platform.
A small first deposit shows quick gains, encouraging larger investments, sometimes funded by loans or savings. The dashboard shows mounting profits, but withdrawal attempts trigger demands for taxes or release fees paid to accounts the fraud ring controls.
In Lithuania the scam often references the Bank of Lithuania or EU rules to appear legitimate, exploiting the country's genuine fintech licensing to lend false credibility, and the patient grooming makes victims slow to suspect deception.
Common red flags
- A new online contact who shifts from friendly chat to crypto investment tips
- A platform claiming Bank of Lithuania or EU regulation you cannot verify on official registers
- Small early withdrawals that succeed, building confidence before bigger deposits
- Demands to pay tax or release fees before any withdrawal is allowed
- Pressure to keep the investment secret from your bank or family
- Profits shown only on a dashboard and never received in your own wallet
- Encouragement to take loans or sell assets to invest more
How to protect yourself
- Verify any platform against the Bank of Lithuania and EU registers before depositing
- Never take investment advice from someone you met online and have not verified in person
- Treat unsolicited dating-app or messaging contacts discussing crypto as high-risk
- Refuse any demand to pay tax or fees to release a withdrawal
- Never borrow or sell assets to fund an online investment introduced by a contact
- Reverse-image-search a new contact's photos before trusting their story
How to report it
- Report the fraud to the Lithuanian Police via 112 or your local station
- Alert your bank immediately so outgoing transfers can be flagged or recalled
- Warn the Bank of Lithuania, which supervises financial firms, about the platform
Frequently asked questions
How can I verify a crypto platform in Lithuania?
Check the platform and any firm behind it against the Bank of Lithuania registers and the ESMA warning lists, and be sceptical of any badge shown only on the platform itself. A genuine fintech licence can be confirmed independently — if a firm cannot supply a verifiable licence number, treat it as fraudulent.