Prime Coin customer reviews

Updated: April 3, 2026
Prime Coin
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Summary
Reviewers uniformly warn that Prime‑Coin (also appearing as Prime iCon, prime-coin.live, prime-coin.info) is a sophisticated scam: the site looks professional but fabricates account balances and profits, uses fake advisor identities (named in complaints), and initially allows small withdrawals to build trust before blocking larger withdrawals. Victims describe an initial low entry amount (often $250) followed by pressure to send much larger sums—ranging from a few thousand to tens of thousands (examples cited include losses of $60k, £62k, £25k, €3,979)—and being told to pay bogus “withdrawal” taxes or fees (around 20%). The fraudsters ask users to install remote‑access software (AnyDesk/TeamViewer), help set up accounts on Binance and Revolut, request credit card/prepaid transfers and personal documents, and may use customers’ details to try to take more money. Reviewers say the operators change domains, use multiple guises, cite fake blockchain or regulatory reasons to refuse withdrawals, and sometimes impersonate public figures or use AI‑style interfaces to appear legitimate. Affected users advise deleting remote‑access tools, contacting banks, cancelling cards, notifying Binance and the relevant financial authorities (FCA mentioned), and reporting the scam to law enforcement; the overall recommendation is to avoid any contact with prime‑coin and not to send money.
Brent D
03.02.2023 | 06:26

DO NOT give any “prime-coin.info” callers your personal information and your hard-earned money. The company is not legitimate! I lost $60K on December 23, 2022. If it’s too good to be true, it is, believe me! So, anyone on this platform writing how great “prime-coin.info” is are the same scammers working the phones. These people are scammers posing as “traders”. They ask for money via credit card, pre-loaded card, or money transfer, with the promise of easy, impressive returns. In reality, it’s all fabricated (BS). When you try to withdraw money from or close your account, the “trader” will ignore your phone calls and emails, and may even use your credit or personal information to access even more funds without your knowledge. If you think you have been the victim of the “prime-coin.info” scam, compile any and all documentation you may have received from the binary options traders and: Delete TeamViewer. Contact Binance to inform them. Cancel your credit cards and debit cards. If you have provided “prime-coin.info” with your banking information, contact your bank to advise it of this. If you have provided the scammers with passport information, driver’s licence, or utility bill information, contact the appropriate issuer(s) to advise them of this.

glenn smith
23.12.2022 | 13:18

Michael Levi from Prime-coin is a con artist took me for £62k then closed my fake account.Do not get involved. He is a disgusting excuse for a human being

Nick Tindal Christensen
18.12.2022 | 06:54

This FraudFirm takes Your Money investet🤬 Take care fore Them they dissapears if you want to withdraw money from your Account 👎🏽 Took me for €3.979 🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬🤬

Tony archer
14.12.2022 | 06:09

Absolute scam, Chris fox is an absolute joke, I don’t know how he sleeps at night.

Alan Lyall
04.12.2022 | 17:50

Don't go near this company, in fact report them to the authorities BEFORE you start any formal contract with them. Let the authorities deal with them in your name to hopefully catch them in the act. Chris Fox took ALL the money from my account £25000 leaving me with nothing! Don't touch them even with an extended barge pole. They are thieving scammers,

Claire Morris
29.11.2022 | 11:25

Prime-Coin comes across as extremely professional. There are some very good reviews on various UK sites but they're a total scam. They pretend to help you invest in crypto and show you the results of your deposits and profits on their fake webpage prime-coin.info. Whatever you put in will not come back out even if you pay the 20% "withdrawal" fee that the fake Blockchain advises is for regulatory purposes. George Polansky set up my account. Jamie John Cole was my pretend advisor. Nina Salinger was back office compliance. Every one of them fake scammers. If you don't believe me, check out the article produced by FCA (Financial Conduct Authority) in the UK. Please don't get scammed like I did. Save your money!!

Malathi Reddy
10.11.2022 | 10:46

Totally bogus. They are scammers and also operate under various guises. DO NOT get conned. The initial investment is $250. The article will use someone famous that you follow and they make you take out short term loans with the promise that they will pay it back with profit generated within 48 hours which is also not true. They help set up accounts with AnyDesk, Binance and Revolut and transfer money and make it look as though you are making a profit. When you get suspicious they will allow a small withdrawal so you think it’s ligit. They will try to scam you for anything ranging from £40k to over £100k and will prevent any withdrawals putting all sorts of reasons from a bogus blockchain regulations to other bogus tales. The sites are all bogus. It seems like the AI is generating profit but in reality it’s well designed scam platform designed to take your money. It’s all controlled by them although it looks like you have control over your account. See the FCA website as it has all the information.

jeff womacks
04.11.2022 | 20:17

Good luck ever getting your money out. the second part of their SCAM is they want you to pay Taxes on any withdrawls. your money will never reach your account. they were Prime-Coin.live. They changed to Prime-Coin.info

Andi
01.11.2022 | 20:34

This company is a scam there real name is Prime iCon, all they will do is take your money and then insult you so be aware!

Vitto Golan
30.10.2022 | 20:03

Fake. Avoid spensing money into this.

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