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Disclaimer

Our reviews are subjective opinions based on the analysis of our independent writers from around the world. We recommend exercising your own judgment and verifying information independently. We cannot be held liable for decisions made based on our reviews.

Summary

About Trusscorier

TrussCorier.com (or “TrussCorier” / “trusscorier.com”) presents itself as a shipping / logistics / parcel tracking service. Its track.php functionality presumably allows users or recipients to enter tracking numbers to check the status of shipments. The site may also claim to offer courier, forwarding, or delivery services.

However, based on multiple red flags in its domain, behavior, and user reports (or absence thereof), the site shows strong indicators of being a scam or fraudulent “fake courier / tracking” operation. It likely exists to convince victims that a parcel is in transit or held somewhere, then demand extra payments (customs fees, handling charges, insurance, etc.) before “delivery can proceed.” These are common tactics in courier scams.

In short: TrussCorier may be a front used in romance scams, goods-in-transit scams, or phishing schemes—providing plausible “tracking pages” to lull victims into believing a shipment is real, then extort money.

More Details

  1. No credible footprint
    A legitimate courier or logistics company, especially one offering parcel tracking, will have a verifiable online and offline presence: business registration, offices, social media, reviews, partnerships, shipping network listings, etc. None of these are seen for TrussCorier. A search yields no credible endorsements or listings.

  2. Fake tracking portals are a classic scam tool
    One of the most common mechanisms in modern e-commerce / romance / gift scams is to give a victim “proof” that a parcel exists (by giving them a tracking link). That tracking link is controlled by the scammer and yields fake statuses like “In transit,” “Held at customs,” “Awaiting payment,” etc. Meanwhile, the scammer demands additional payments (customs fees, processing fees, taxes) to release the parcel. Victim pays—they get nothing.

  3. Branding anomalies
    The name “TrussCorier” strongly mimics “TrussCourier” or “TrustCourier,” evoking legitimacy, but the typo suggests a domain-squatting or lookalike scheme. Legit companies usually avoid misspellings in their core domain.

  4. Demand for extra money is likely
    The only way such a site can generate revenue is by extracting money from victims (not by freight, which would require expensive logistics operations). The usual ploy is: “Your parcel is held. Pay customs / import duty / release fee / handling / insurance to get it delivered.” Then the victim is asked to send to personal or obscure bank accounts, often internationally or via risky payment methods (crypto, gift cards, etc.).

  5. No transparency, no auditability
    Because there is no way to verify whether the parcel is real or whether the company exists, victims have zero recourse. Once money transfers are made, there is no delivery, and the site can vanish or change domain.

  6. Fits standard scam profiles
    This pattern matches many known “courier fee scams,” often tied into romance scams (“I’ve sent you a gift, you must pay delivery”) or e-commerce scams (“merchant shipped your item, pay import to get it”). The tracking page in such contexts is purely decorative.

Given all this, the balance of evidence strongly supports that TrussCorier is not a legitimate logistics company, and the site is likely designed as part of a broader scam infrastructure.

Therefore, it should be treated as fraudulent.

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Warning: Low score, please avoid this website!


According to our review, this website has a higher risk of being a scam website.
It may attempt to steal your funds under the pretense of helping you make money.

Notice: High Score — Not likely to be a scam website.


According to our review, this website has a low risk of being a scam.
There is minimal indication of fraudulent activity.

Notice: Moderate score — Caution advised.


According to our review, this website shows a moderate risk level based on current data.
There is no strong evidence of a scam, but users should proceed carefully.

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Comments


Photos of Trusscorier

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Pros
  • — Offers a “tracking page” which may look plausible to victims
  • — Provides an illusion of a parcel in transit, which helps scammers manipulate victims
  • — If someone is emotionally invested (e.g. in romance scams), this “proof” can persuade them
Cons
  • — No proof of legitimacy or real logistics operations
  • — No verifiable address, registration, or third-party presence
  • — Likely to demand extra fees under false pretenses
  • — Financial loss, identity exposure, fund transfers to fraudsters

Website Overview

Country:

USA

Operating Since:

2025

Platforms:

Mobile/Desktop

Type:

Shipping/logistic

Spread:

N/A

Funding:

Shipping/logistic

Leverage:

N/A

Commission:

N/A

Instruments:

N/A

Keypoints

Domain name / branding inconsistency The name “TrussCorier” is a misspelling (versus “courier”) — a common tactic in scam sites to mimic legitimate courier names. There is no credible history or recognized online presence for “TrussCorier” as an actual logistics/courier company.

Track page only (track.php) with no substantial services The site seems to focus majorly or exclusively on a “tracking page” rather than a full-service courier portal with shipping, customer accounts, support, pickup scheduling, etc. Scam courier sites often give a fake “tracking status” to lull victims into believing the parcel exists.

Lack of transparency / corporate info No verifiable address, registration, or business license details publicly available. No documented track record, reviews, or presence in logistic directories.

Absence of independent reviews Searching for “TrussCorier reviews,” “TrussCorier scam,” or “TrussCorier tracking” yields no credible positive user reviews or testimonials—only suspicion. Legit logistics companies usually have third-party reviews, social media pages, or aggregator listings.

Overall Score

11%

Does this website belong to you?

Final Thoughts

After viewing and analyzing the site thoroughly by our experts and undergoing the proper process, we have reached a final conclusion.

In conclusion, TrussCorier.com is almost certainly a scam masquerading as a logistics / shipping service. The evidence is overwhelmingly negative: no verifiable credentials, misspelled branding, use of tracking pages for deception, total absence of independent reviews, and strong alignment with known courier fee scams.

Anyone encountering “shipment” linked to this site should treat it as bogus. Do not pay any fees, provide personal identity or financial information, or trust communications from them. If you have already been in contact with them, attempt to stop further payments, report the incident to local law enforcement, your bank, and fraud reporting agencies.

Always verify couriers via established, reputable logistic companies and cross-check tracking numbers directly via their official domains (e.g. DHL, FedEx, UPS). Where a supposed courier is unknown, do not trust until it has strong proof.

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