We’ve become aware of a scam campaign sending fake calendar invites that impersonate Malwarebytes and attempt to trick recipients into calling a scam “billing support” number.
We have written before about how calendar invites can be abused for phishing, and even about how Google Calendar invites can be weaponized to steal private data.
The amounts in these fake invites are large and attention-grabbing, usually several hundred dollars for multiple years of service.
The scammers want you to believe a considerable charge has already gone through so that you react immediately instead of thinking critically.
The goal is to get you to call, rather than click a link. The calendar description reads like a receipt, but the real call to action is always the same: urging you to call a number immediately to dispute or cancel the charge. m
Once you call, the scammer can pressure you in real time. They might ask for payment details, convince you to install remote-access software, or manipulate you into sending money.


The body of the calendar invite is crammed with fake details intended to look like they came from a billing system:

The language and formatting scream copied-and-pasted scam script rather than professional communication.
There are several inconsistencies you can look for:
Unnatural or incorrect phrasing:
Inconsistent capitalization and formatting:
Phone numbers written with odd punctuation:
Overly effusive, generic greetings and closings:
Individually, any one of these might just be sloppy writing. Seeing many of them together in an unsolicited billing notice is a strong indicator of fraud.
The calendar invite itself doesn’t charge you anything. Its purpose is to trick you into calling the scammer’s phone number.
Once they have you on the line, several things can happen.
A common script goes like this:
You call, upset about the huge “renewal.”
The scammer agrees it’s a mistake and says they can “reverse the charge.”
They then ask for:
Once they have that information, they can:
The phony renewal is just a pretext to make handing over financial data feel reasonable.
In some versions, the scammer pretends to refund you too much. They may:
The result is that you send them real money to fix a problem that never existed.
Tech support-style scammers often escalate the call by asking you to install legitimate remote-access tools like AnyDesk, TeamViewer, and others.
They claim they need access:
Once on your machine, they can:
The longer they stay connected, the more damage they can do.
Even if you hang up before giving bank details, the scammer may still try to extract:
Combined with other breached data, this information can be used later for:
Don’t be fooled. The person on the phone will usually sound patient, polite, and professional. They’re trying to convince you they work for the company named in the invite and normalize the idea that you should call them any time there’s a billing issue.
Once they’ve gained your trust, they may:
The one constant: they want you to act quickly and privately. The objective is to rush you into dealing with them, and only them, instead of checking independently with your bank or the real company.
Legitimate companies send invoices and renewal confirmations as emails, in-app messages, or account notifications. They don’t send them as calendar appointments created by random people using private email addresses.
Red flags include:
If a “receipt” shows up in your calendar instead of through your normal billing channels, treat it as suspicious by default.
We’ve included instructions in our article how to remove fake entries from your calendar, which covers how to do it on Outlook calendar, Gmail calendar, Android calendar, Mac calendar, and iPhone and iPad calendars.
We’ve covered some of this already, but the main precautions are:
Pro tip: If you’re not sure whether an event is a scam, you can paste the message into Malwarebytes Scam Guard. It can help you decide what to do next.
Phone numbers involved in these scams are:
We don’t just report on scams—we help detect them
Cybersecurity risks should never spread beyond a headline. If something looks dodgy to you, check if it’s a scam using Malwarebytes Scam Guard. Submit a screenshot, paste suspicious content, or share a link, text or phone number, and we’ll tell you if it’s a scam or legit. Available with Malwarebytes Premium Security for all your devices, and in the Malwarebytes app for iOS and Android.
*** This is a Security Bloggers Network syndicated blog from Malwarebytes authored by Malwarebytes. Read the original post at: https://www.malwarebytes.com/blog/threat-intel/2026/03/fake-malwarebytes-renewal-notices-in-your-calendar