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Phishing Link Checker

Enter a full URL or email message to check if the links are safe before you click. Our AI-powered phishing link checker helps Australians stay protected from online scams and phishing attacks.

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About Phishing Link Checker Tool

Our scam website checker and link tester tool helps detect malicious links in emails, text messages, websites, and other online content. Using AI, it scans each URL for suspicious patterns and identifies potential phishing attempts before they cause harm.

For Australians, phishing and scam activity has become one of the most common forms of online fraud, often imitating trusted brands and government services like myGov or Australia Post. EasyDMARC’s link safety checker helps you spot these risks early and stay secure.

The tool compares links against a database of known phishing websites and alerts you if a URL appears suspicious. You’ll see the original URL, any redirects, and the current URL status, helping you avoid identity theft or financial loss.

EasyDMARC’s phishing and scam link checker is a simple way to keep your personal or business information safe from evolving online threats in Australia.

Phishing Link Checker Tool

Recently Checked URLs

UrlStatus
https://discord.gg/AQTKUa3TSuspicious
https://airupbottle.shssxw.com/products/electric-orange-bottle-incl-3-podsClean
https://dropmefiles.com/Fnhs5Suspicious
https://anlzn.clicks.mlsend.com/te/cl/eyJ2Ijoie1wiYVwiOjIsXCJsXCI6NTEwMDY4MTgzNjQ2ODc1NDAsXCJyXCI6NzUxNTc0NDQyMzg1MDk0MTN9IiwicyI6ImYyNzRiOTcyZWE3ZTNlZDAifQClean
http://www.darcjaguar.com/Suspicious
https://r20.rs6.net/tn.jsp?f=001FrddWEUDtPVwXwe6v2FRNSVoRuNpIF4hjSFYA8gGvIG32obXIWfMQPEK2SBXBhBdsZpxQ4TyXqngC1x970_wNJ87DkWAkmINQdhiWTfpz64iZK72A9whUEeC4KMV8_II8wKGwe5LsgawkeoXwjXk_tydc8mQdgxREWdzGs9vAWE_O24JYajKdIge7Qf43nxyS7ztmR3e--IDgHalBVBU9Sm9P1viW7-FxAMYXRNVAskEUdl1rapg2Q==&c=e72m9LYpA54M_kn9I41o-7GlWA358y6cqB9yxBhnUbe8GXyxoXwgJA==&ch=bHYEtr0Lpwm4yWoedu9QoelXEL2ytwmLlYvnML3Xu97gBrHB7q-QsQ==&_bWFyaWFuYS5tYW51QGRhY2lhZ3JvdXAuY29tSuspicious
https://www.facebook.com/n/?recover%2Fcode%2F&n=70107863&s=23&exp_locale=en_GB&cuid=AYiw_-nuP6SvknUTG_VUV1NKNuXH46IpvMoeS9XkUYhqwngWWHfnJdCHQTqI2BqXuXLgMHqXW93XPmiJgWshq9im&redirect_from=button&aref=1690156070569247&medium=email&mid=6012fd69d824dG3be2e506G601302033851fG178&n_m=amal.ilmiawan%40gmail.com&rms=v2&irms=trueClean
https://gcc.lhramericas.com/jobs/3000201-contracting-representativeClean
https://verify.dcounter.space/v/4b431cp528Suspicious
https://panel.mycontractormalaysia.com/Clean

How does the Phishing Link Checker work?

The tool uses a machine-learning model trained on millions of URLs to detect phishing and malicious sites. It extracts URLs, scans them for suspicious patterns, and flags them as Good or Suspicious. This helps Australians identify dangerous links before they open them, especially those impersonating trusted local brands, banks, or government services.

DMARC prevents cybercriminals from sending emails that appear to come from legitimate Australian domains. As adoption in Australia rose from 9.89% to 26.34% in a year, organisations are becoming better protected against phishing and spoofing attacks that target local businesses and government services.

Only 16.9% of Australian domains enforce a “reject” policy, which blocks unauthorised senders completely. Without this strict policy, phishing emails can still reach inboxes, even if DMARC is technically enabled.

Just 13.5% of Australian domains are fully protected with properly enforced DMARC settings. This means most organisations are still at risk of email-based impersonation and phishing attempts.

Look closely at sender details, hover over links before clicking, and check for unusual domains or misspellings. Be cautious of messages urging immediate action or asking for personal details. In Australia, many phishing campaigns mimic real services like myGov, ATO, or Australia Post, so always double-check the sender and the URL.

Paste a full URL or email text into the checker, and it will analyse up to 20 links at once. The tool reviews each one for signs of phishing, redirects, or malicious intent, providing a clear Good or Suspicious result. It’s a quick, reliable way for Australians to test emails and messages that seem off or unexpected.

“Good” means the link appears legitimate and doesn’t contain any detected phishing or scam indicators. It’s generally safe to visit, but you should still make sure it’s relevant to your sender or context, especially when dealing with financial or government-related emails.

“Suspicious” means the link shows signs of phishing or malicious activity, like lookalike domains, redirects, or known bad hosts. Australians should treat these with caution and avoid opening them, as phishing scams can lead to stolen credentials or financial loss.

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