Military Consumer

Military Consumer Welcome to the Military Consumer page, the Federal Trade Commission's official military consumer education page! Just a click adds one to your profile.

COMMENT POLICY

We welcome your comments and thoughts about the information on this page. If you do have something to say, please be courteous and respectful to others. We won’t review or edit any comments before they are posted, but we will delete any comments that:

- contain spam or are off-topic
- use vulgar language or offensive terms that target specific groups or contain personal attacks
-

are sales pitches, promotions or links to commercial sites
- spread clearly misleading or false information
- include personal information, like home addresses

The FTC deals with issues that touch the economic life of every American. It is the only federal agency with both consumer protection and competition jurisdiction in broad sectors of the economy. The FTC pursues vigorous and effective law enforcement; advances consumers’ interests by sharing its expertise with federal and state legislatures and U.S. and international government agencies; develops policy and research tools through hearings, workshops, and conferences; and creates practical and plain-language educational programs for consumers and businesses in a global marketplace with constantly changing technologies. We created this page as a way to share information about topics related to online safety and security. If you want to file a complaint with the FTC, see www.ftc.gov/complaint. PRIVACY POLICY

You are on the Federal Trade Commission’s Military Consumer page, not the official FTC or Military Consumer website. Facebook is controlled and operated by a third party, and is not a government website or application. By using Facebook and its application providers, you may be providing non-government third parties access to your personal information, which can be used to distinguish or trace your identity. In addition, Facebook and its application providers may use persistent tracking technology throughout their sites. Please read Facebook's Privacy Policy to learn more. The FTC will not collect, maintain, or disseminate personal information from individuals who visit the FTC page. The FTC may, however, read, review, or rely upon information that individuals make available to the public or to the FTC on Facebook, including comments on the pages created by the FTC, as authorized or required by law. To learn how the FTC safeguards personal information we collect, please read our Privacy Policy. Third Party Applications May Access and Share Your Information

EXTERNAL LINKS - Links posted by the FTC may lead to third-party, nongovernment websites that may have different privacy policies than Facebook or ftc.gov. EMBEDDED APPLICATIONS - Embedded applications on the FTC page may be provided by a third party, and may have different privacy policies than Facebook or ftc.gov. Countless applications are available on the web and through social networking sites, with more coming every day. Downloading an app may allow access to your personal information, or your friends’ – information that's not related to the purpose of the app. The app’s developers may share your information with marketers or other companies. Some social networking sites let you adjust your privacy settings to limit an app’s access to your personal information – whether it’s an app you use, or one your friends use. Check that your privacy settings reflect your preferences. Before downloading an app, take a look at the privacy policy to see what information it will access, how they'll use it, and with whom they'll share it. Then you can make a decision about adding it. If you’ve downloaded an app and think it has collected or used your personal information in a way you didn’t expect, report it to the FTC. We created this page as a way to share information about topics related to the FTC and its work. (OPTIONAL) Feedback regarding the FTC page may also be sent to [email protected].

06/03/2026

Some scammers don’t just go after money. They go after your hard-earned veterans benefits, too. Commissioner Mark Meador shares how to thank a veteran for their service by encouraging them to subscribe to MilitaryConsumer.gov to keep up with the latest scams.

06/02/2026

Medicare losses due to fraud, errors, and abuse cost taxpayers about $60 billion every year. Providers might double bill Medicare for a single treatment, charge for things like a back brace you didn’t get (or need); a company might offer you a fake Medicare drug plan; or a scammer might ask you to...

06/02/2026

A real FTC employee won’t text you their photo ID to “verify” their identity. But an FTC impersonator will. Report imposter scams at ReportFraud.ftc.gov

Are you ready for hurricane season? Check out the FTC’s Dealing with Weather Emergencies article so you’re prepared to a...
06/01/2026

Are you ready for hurricane season? Check out the FTC’s Dealing with Weather Emergencies article so you’re prepared to avoid scams in case a hurricane (and scammers) cross your path. Learn more:

Hurricane season starts today. Are you prepared? Wherever you live, scammers follow whatever weather emergencies may strike.

06/01/2026
05/27/2026

Protect Yourself from Scams: Guidance for Veterans
Never pay upfront for any VA services.
Don’t click on links in unexpected emails or texts.
Don’t open suspicious attachments.
Don’t forward or reply to suspicious messages.
If you spot a potential scam, report it to your local Integrity and Compliance Team at [email protected], visit reportfraud.ftc.gov, or call (202) 326-2000.

05/27/2026

Attend a free one-hour virtual roundtable with experts discussing how scammers exploit trust to steal money and personal information. Join us today, May 27, 2026 at 2pm ET: http://bit.ly/4dNRwXS

Asked to enter your email address and password to open a party invite? That’s a scam:
05/26/2026

Asked to enter your email address and password to open a party invite? That’s a scam:

It’s graduation and summer party season. The FTC is getting reports about unexpected “You’re invited” texts and emails that are actually phishing scams. These fake invitations ask for your email login credentials or a special pass code to open them, but don’t do it. Learn how these phishin...

The FTC remembers and honors those who have served and sacrificed for our country. Thank you.
05/25/2026

The FTC remembers and honors those who have served and sacrificed for our country. Thank you.

Address

600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington D.C., DC
20580

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Military Consumer posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Military Consumer:

Share