Someone's impersonating you on Instagram. Here's what to do.
A fake account with your name or photos can scam the people who trust you. Move in this order: confirm it, save proof, report it, then warn your contacts.
Instagram impersonation is when an account uses your name, your photos, or your bio to pass as you — sometimes to scam the people who trust you, sometimes to damage your reputation, and sometimes both at once. The account might message your followers asking for money, post something embarrassing under your name, or just sit there quietly collecting your real photos for later use. None of that requires access to your actual account, which is part of what makes it unsettling: your real profile can be completely secure while a copy of you causes damage somewhere else.
First, confirm it's actually impersonation
Not every similar-looking account is malicious. Fan accounts, parody accounts, tribute pages, and people who simply share your name or a similar handle exist in large numbers on Instagram and aren't automatically a threat. Before you treat something as an attack, look for the signs that separate genuine impersonation from coincidence: the account is using your actual photos, not just a similar name; it has copied your bio, workplace, or biographical details closely; it's contacting your real friends or followers as if it were you; it's asking people for money, gift cards, or personal information; or it's posting content specifically designed to look like it came from you. If an account checks several of those boxes, treat it as real impersonation and move to the next step.
Save evidence before the account changes or disappears
Impersonation accounts get edited, locked, or deleted quickly — sometimes as soon as the person running it senses attention. Before you do anything else, document what you can:
- The profile URL and the exact username, copied directly rather than retyped
- Screenshots of the bio, profile photo, and any posts or stories
- Any direct messages the fake account sent to other people — if you can't see them yourself, ask a contact who received one to forward you a screenshot
- The date you found the account
Don't message or confront the fake account directly. Engaging with it can tip off whoever is running it to lock down, delete evidence, or change tactics before you've finished documenting anything — just observe and record.
Report it to Instagram
Instagram has a built-in reporting flow specifically for accounts pretending to be you or someone you know. You can reach it from the fake profile itself — tap the "···" menu and choose Report — or through Instagram's Help Center impersonation-report flow, which walks through the same process outside the app. Provide clear, consistent information: your own username, the fake account's username, and the specific evidence you saved. If Instagram asks for ID verification to confirm your identity as part of the report, only use Instagram's own official in-app or Help Center process for that. Never use a link sent to you by someone else claiming to help "verify" your report or "speed up" the takedown — that's a common secondary scam that targets people who are already worried about impersonation.
Warn your contacts through a different channel
Reporting to Instagram takes time to resolve, and the fake account can keep contacting people in the meantime. Close that window by posting from your real account, or reaching out directly to people you think might be targeted: "There's a fake account using my name and photos. Please don't accept requests, reply to messages, or click links from that profile." A short, clear warning like this stops a follow-up scam before it starts, since the impersonator's whole approach depends on people not knowing the account is fake.
Secure your real account too
Even if the impersonator never touched your actual account, this is a good moment to check it over. Change your password if you have any doubt at all, turn on two-factor authentication if it isn't already on, review which devices and sessions are currently logged in, and remove any third-party apps connected to your account that you don't recognize. If you've actually lost access to your own account — not just found a copy of it — use Instagram's official hacked-account recovery flow rather than any third-party "recovery service." Those services are frequently scams themselves, aimed at people who are already anxious about losing their account.
If the fake account is actively scamming people
When the impersonation goes further than a copied profile — asking people for money, selling fake products, or sharing malicious links under your name — save additional evidence specifically covering that behavior: screenshots of the messages or posts doing the scamming, not just the profile itself. It's also worth filing a report with the Federal Trade Commission at reportfraud.ftc.gov, since financial scams run through impersonation accounts fall under general consumer fraud reporting as well as Instagram's own policies. For the fuller process of documenting and reporting a scam, see our guide on how to report a scam website.
