Rob J., 31, an internal auditor in California, thought he was doing everything right this tax season. He filed his return as usual, even early, and expected a state refund just short of $400.
Instead, he got a letter saying the state had taken it.
The notice from the California Franchise Tax Board said his refund had been intercepted to pay a debt owed to a local community college.
There was just one problem: Rob had never attended that school.
“How could the state be taking my tax refund to pay a debt to a community college I’ve never attended?” he told us at McAfee. “I immediately knew something was wrong.”
“I started researching and came across the term ‘ghost student,’ and that’s when it clicked. Someone had used my identity to enroll in a college like they were me.”
How McAfee+ Advanced Helps Protect You from Identity Theft
Scams like this do not start with a suspicious text or email. They start with your data being exposed somewhere you cannot see.
That is why protection has to go beyond one moment and cover the full lifecycle of identity theft.
McAfee+ Advanced gives you multiple layers working together so you are not left figuring it out after the damage is done:
- Identity Monitoring alerts you if your personal info shows up where it should not, so you can act fast
- Personal Data Cleanup helps remove your information from data broker sites, making you harder to target in the first place
- Scam Detector flags suspicious texts, emails, links, and even deepfake videos before you engage
- Safe Browsing helps block risky sites if you do click
- Device Security helps detect malicious apps or downloads
- Secure VPN keeps your data private, especially on public Wi-Fi
This kind of layered protection is critical in cases like ghost student scams, where the first sign of fraud often comes after financial damage has already happened.
What Is a Ghost Student Scam?
A ghost student scam is a form of identity theft where someone uses your stolen personal information, often your Social Security number, to enroll in a college or university under your name.
The scammer is not trying to attend school. They are trying to use your identity to access financial aid, create accounts, or generate funds tied to a real person.
In many cases, the victim has no idea anything happened until the consequences show up later, such as a tax refund being taken, a debt appearing, or a loan being opened in their name.
That is exactly what happened to Rob.
“I started researching and came across the term ‘ghost student,’ and that’s when it clicked,” he said. “Someone had used my identity to enroll in a college like they were me.”
How Ghost Student Scams Happen
These scams typically follow a predictable pattern, even if the victim does not see it happening in real time:
| Stage | What happens | Why it matters |
| Data exposure | Your personal information is leaked in a data breach or collected from data broker sites | Scammers get the core details they need to impersonate you |
| Identity misuse | Your information is used to apply to colleges or financial aid programs | The scam is tied to your real identity, not a fake one |
| Enrollment activity | Fake students may enroll just long enough to access funds or create accounts | This helps scammers avoid early detection |
| Financial impact | Debts, balances, or aid obligations are created in your name | You become financially responsible on paper |
| Discovery | You find out later through a notice, refund interception, or account alert | By this point, damage has already been done |
In Rob’s case, the starting point was a data breach the year before. His Social Security number had been exposed, but he had not frozen his credit.
Someone used that information to enroll at Pasadena City College. When the balance went unpaid, the state redirected his tax refund to cover it.
“Despite Being the Victim, I’m Trying to Prove My Identity”
Once Rob realized what happened, he moved quickly. He froze his credit, set up identity monitoring, filed a police report, and began working with the college to prove he was not the student.
He says the process has been slow and frustrating.
“I’ve spent hours on the phone trying to fix this… I’m exhausted,” he said. “Despite being the victim I am the one dealing with the consequences and trying to prove my identity to the same institution that let a fake me register.”
When he contacted campus police, he learned something else: “this has been happening to other people too.”
Why Ghost Student Scams Are Increasing
Ghost student scams are part of a broader shift in how identity theft works.
Instead of quick-hit fraud like a stolen credit card, scammers are using real identities to create more complex, longer-term opportunities for financial gain.
In higher education, that can include:
- Enrolling fake students using stolen identities
- Accessing financial aid
- Holding seats in classes long enough to collect funds
This trend has already affected thousands of suspected cases across education systems and continues to grow as scammers scale their tactics
What to Do If Your Identity Is Used in a Ghost Student Scam
If something like this happens, speed matters:
- Freeze your credit with all three bureaus
- Check your FAFSA and student loan records
- Contact the school and dispute the enrollment
- File a police report
- Set up identity monitoring and alerts
- Remove your personal information from data broker sites
These steps help contain the damage, but they are reactive. The goal is to catch exposure earlier. McAfee+ Advanced can help you with freezing your credit, ongoing identity monitoring, and data removal from the dark web.
How Rob’s Story Ends: ‘I’m Waiting for the Other Shoe to Drop’
Rob has confirmed there are no federal loans in his name, but the situation is not fully resolved.
“I still feel like I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop,” he said.
That uncertainty is part of what makes identity theft so difficult. You are often reacting to something that started months or even years earlier. Rob said he currently has an outstanding police report and is in the process of getting his refund reclaimed.
How to Stay Ahead of Identity Theft Like This
Ghost student scams work because they operate quietly, using real data in systems most people are not actively watching. That is where ongoing protection matters.
McAfee+ Advanced helps close those gaps by:
- Alerting you early when your personal data appears on the dark web or in risky environments
- Reducing your exposure by removing your data from broker sites that scammers rely on
- Blocking scam entry points across texts, emails, links, and deepfakes
- Protecting your devices and connections so attackers have fewer ways in
Because the goal is not just to respond to identity theft, it’s to catch the signals early enough that someone cannot become a “student” in your name in the first place.