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Exposing the Tesco Scam Targeting South Africans With False Promises and a Stolen Brand Identity

Exposing the Tesco Scam Targeting South Africans With False Promises and a Stolen Brand Identity

Every scam tells a story.

Sometimes it’s an entirely fabricated one. Other times, it borrows from a real story—an existing brand whose decades of trust and credibility are cynically co-opted to lend legitimacy to an otherwise predictable and empty scheme.

That’s the case with the Tesco scam currently doing the rounds under the domain tescospro.shop, falsely operating under the guise of the legitimate UK-based supermarket chain, Tesco (tesco.com).

The real Tesco, headquartered in the United Kingdom, operates in a few countries—namely Ireland, Hungary, Slovakia, and Czechia—but notably, has no operations in South Africa, a fact that makes this scam’s South African targeting all the more audacious.

A familiar scam pitch dressed in new branding

At its core, the Tesco scam is not new. Its pitch is the same tired formula that has become a staple among opportunistic online frauds aimed at South Africans: offer a fictitious product-based “investment opportunity,” promise laughable daily yields, and then push the illusion of earnings through mock dashboards, fake income tracking, and dopamine-triggering bonus schemes.

Only this time, the product being “invested in” is supposedly groceries. Participants are told they can buy into various packages—some under the K-series, others under F-series and C-series product banners—each offering specific “daily income” returns.

The prices range from R120 to over R25,000, and the supposed earnings range from a few rands per day to outrageous claims of R41,282 in under 50 days.

This is the exact same playbook we’ve seen countless times before: if it’s not virtual groceries, it’s virtual power backups, virtual farms, virtual scooters, or virtual mining rigs. The theme changes, but the scam remains the same—crafted to part victims from their hard-earned money under the illusion of easy returns.

Monthly salary promises, team-building commissions, and fake point systems

To add layers to the illusion of legitimacy and appeal, the scam operates an in-app system of monthly salary rewards for “top partners.” The promise? Build a team, hit recruitment goals, and you’ll receive a monthly payout of up to R30,000.

These tiers are broken down based on the number of direct and indirect recruits (B, C, and D-level users), a hallmark of pyramid-style recruitment masquerading as “business development.”

Beyond that, participants are sold the dream of points-based incentives and commission bonuses for referring others. Points can be redeemed for fake gifts, and commissions are advertised at ridiculous rates—12%, 5%, and 3% downline rewards are offered, based on how many friends you get to join.

The scam even goes so far as to offer daily income estimates based on team-building projections, simulating real earnings to hook people deeper into the scheme.

There’s even a “Welcome 2025” campaign with manufactured cheer and fanfare, promising participants thousands of rands in returns on what are obviously made-up investments in household items like air fryers, mixers, or washing machines.

The real Tesco is being impersonated

Let’s be absolutely clear: this scam has nothing to do with the actual Tesco Group. In fact, a review of the CIPC company database reveals no registration of a company legitimately linked to Tesco UK, even though the name “Tesco” has appeared in various local entities—none of which are associated with the legitimate global chain. The most recent unrelated CIPC registration using the name “Tesco” was in September 2024.

The real Tesco is not registered to operate in South Africa, and has issued multiple warnings in the past about online impersonation, especially on platforms like WhatsApp and phishing sites. But this scam goes further—it creates an entire interface, mimicking the look and feel of a modern e-commerce or fintech platform, while being entirely fraudulent.

Not FSCA-registered and operating outside financial laws

Given that the scam accepts deposits, manages user accounts, and promises fixed returns, it qualifies as a financial services provider. As such, it would need to be registered with the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) in South Africa.

A search of the FSCA database confirms what was already obvious—no entity by the name of Tesco or tescospro.shop is registered as an FSP. This means they are operating illegally, offering financial products to South Africans without authorisation or oversight.

With no investor protections, no complaint mechanisms, and no ombud oversight, victims of this scam will have no recourse once their money is lost. There are no support structures—just a cleverly crafted illusion to keep you spending.

The domain and its hidden registrant

The website itself, tescospro.shop, was registered on 11 October 2024 using Dynadot as the registrar. As with most of these scams, the domain’s WHOIS record has been redacted, concealing the registrant’s identity, email, and country. This lack of transparency is deliberate—it ensures that when the scam collapses (as it inevitably will), there is no one to trace or hold accountable.

This is a key red flag: a supposedly international supermarket launching a massive investment campaign in South Africa—but without any visible ownership, official contact information, or a single legitimate business registration to its name.

The Final Verdict

This Tesco-themed scam is not clever. It is not innovative. And it certainly is not legitimate. It is a recycled template scam—just dressed up in a brand new outfit, using the name of a well-known international brand to reel in unsuspecting victims.

Its offering is fake. Its financial logic is absurd. Its bonuses and dashboards are completely fabricated. And most damning of all, it has no legal standing in South Africa, nor any real connection to Tesco in the UK or anywhere else.

Do not be fooled. Do not engage. And most of all, do not invest.

This is not an opportunity—it’s a scam.

The post Exposing the Tesco Scam Targeting South Africans With False Promises and a Stolen Brand Identity appeared first on Political Analysis South Africa.

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