Too-Good-To-Be-True Price Checker

Extreme discounts can be exciting, but price alone should not make the decision. Compare the advertised price with a normal estimate, then review the payment method and urgency cues before trusting the offer.

Estimated discount: 70%

Compare the discount first

A moderate sale can be normal. A huge unexplained discount on a hard-to-find product deserves more verification, especially when the seller is unfamiliar.

Payment method changes the risk

A low price becomes more concerning if the seller requires bank transfer, gift cards, crypto, or another method with weak buyer protection.

Urgency is not evidence

Countdowns, stock warnings, and one-time claims are sales pressure. They do not prove the price is real or safe.

Check before buying

Compare multiple sellers, read return terms, search for independent context, and leave the deal if the price only works when you ignore the warning signs.

Frequently asked questions

What discount is too good to be true?

There is no universal number. The tool treats larger discounts as more concerning when paired with risky payment or urgency signs.

Can a huge discount be legitimate?

Yes. Clearance, used goods, and special sales can be real. Verify the seller and payment protections before buying.

Does the price checker prove a listing is fake?

No. It gives a simple risk estimate based on the numbers and warning signs you enter.