Your work inbox has a security team.
Your personal inbox has you.

Phishbee gives your whole organization, including employees, families, and members, one address to forward suspicious emails, texts, links, and payment requests. Plain-English answers in minutes, from any inbox.

Where do you forward a suspicious email?

One check address for your whole organization. Here is what happens when someone uses it.

  1. Forward it

    From any email provider, work or personal. No app, no setup. Texts and screenshots work too: if you can forward it or take a picture of it, you can check it.

  2. We check it

    AI-assisted analysis behind strict safety rails. We check the links, the address behind the sender name, attachments, and screenshots, and whether the story the message tells holds together.

  3. A straight answer

    A plain-English verdict and what to do next, in minutes. Every reply explains the red flags it found, in words anyone can act on.

The invoice felt off. Maria forwarded it.

What Maria forwarded
From
ACME Vendor Services <accounts@example-payportal[.]com>
Subject
Overdue invoice INV-4417, final notice

Your payment of $12,840.00 is now 21 days overdue. To avoid interruption of service, settle today through our secure portal:

hxxps://example-payportal[.]com/pay

Please note our updated banking details below for wire transfers.
Daniel Reyes, Accounts Receivable

What Phishbee replied

High risk — do not interact

  • The display name says ACME Vendor Services, but the address behind it belongs to example-payportal[.]com, a lookalike domain with no connection to ACME.
  • New banking details plus a same-day deadline is the standard payment-diversion play. Real billing departments do not switch wire instructions in a final notice.

Do not pay. Do not reply. If you do owe this vendor, confirm through the number or portal you already use, nothing in this email.

A synthetic example. Names, amounts, and addresses are invented, and the links are neutralized, as Phishbee always displays them.

The scams moved to where the filters are not.

In 2025, consumers reported $15.9 billion in fraud losses to the FTC, and a text message was the most common way the fraud arrived (FTC testimony, March 2026 (opens in new tab)). The pattern is consistent everywhere you look.

$20.9B

Reported losses to internet crime in the United States in 2025, across 1,008,597 complaints. Losses rose 26% in one year.

FBI IC3 2025 Internet Crime Report, published April 2026 (opens in new tab)
#1

Phishing and spoofing was the most-reported internet crime of 2025, with 191,561 complaints. More than extortion, more than identity theft.

FBI IC3 2025 Internet Crime Report, published April 2026 (opens in new tab)
$7.7B

Reported lost by Americans 60 and older in 2025, up 59% from the year before. The average reported loss in that age group was $38,500.

FBI IC3 2025 Internet Crime Report, elder fraud section, published April 2026 (opens in new tab)
62%

Of data breaches involved the human element: a person clicking, replying, or paying. Scammers target people, not just systems.

Verizon 2026 Data Breach Investigations Report, published May 2026 (opens in new tab)

Work email gets filtered and monitored. Personal inboxes and phones do not, and that is where scammers go. Phishbee follows the person, not the office.

Works with Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, iCloud, anything that can forward an email.

Built for the organizations people already trust.

Businesses and organizations without a security team

SMBs, associations, nonprofits, franchises, dealerships, property managers, schools, local government. One check address covers your employees, and it works from their personal inboxes too, so their families are covered from day one. A simple dashboard shows you the high-risk messages aimed at your people.

Early access pilot

Credit unions and banks

Give every member a trusted place to ask: is this real? Offered under your name, as your benefit. Members forward from their personal email and get a plain-English answer.

MSPs

One check desk across your managed clients. Their people forward suspicious messages and get plain-English answers; your team sees the high-risk hits across every client in one dashboard.

Individuals and families

First rollouts go through organizations. Join the list anyway and we will tell you when there is a way in for households.

A check desk, not another filter.

Plain English, not security jargon
Verdicts a person can act on: what we found, why it matters, what to do next. Nobody has to know what a header or a homoglyph is.
It teaches as it answers
Every reply spells out the red flags and why they matter, at the exact moment the lesson is useful. Each check leaves the person a little harder to fool.
Works from any inbox
Nothing to install, no migration, no IT project. Anyone with the check address can forward to it from work or personal email.
Privacy-first
Built privacy-first. Raw submitted content is not retained by default. Personal identifiers are hashed in our records. Suspicious links are always neutralized before display.

Frequently asked questions

What happens to a message after I forward it?

Phishbee reads what you forwarded and checks the links, the address behind the sender name, and any attachments or screenshots, looking for the marks of a scam. You get a reply in plain English that explains what we found and why it matters. We keep the verdict and our analysis notes. We do not keep the raw message itself unless your organization explicitly turns that on, and suspicious links are neutralized everywhere they appear.

Does Phishbee block or filter my email?

No. Phishbee does not sit in front of your inbox. Your mail keeps flowing exactly as it does today. When something looks off, you forward it to your check address and get an answer. Nothing is blocked, quarantined, or deleted.

What can I check?

Forwarded emails, screenshots, links, text messages (send a screenshot), and payment or invoice requests. If you can forward it or take a picture of it, Phishbee can look at it.

Do employees or family members need to install anything?

No. There is no app and no setup. Anyone you share the check address with can forward to it from any email account, including personal Gmail, Outlook, Yahoo, and iCloud addresses.

How is this different from a spam filter or security training?

Spam filters guess before you ever see a message, and the convincing ones get through. Training tells people to be careful but gives them nowhere to go when a real message lands in front of them. Phishbee is the place to go. A person who is unsure forwards the message and gets a clear answer with the red flags explained, the lesson arriving at the moment it is actually useful.

Someone already clicked the link or replied. What now?

Forward the message anyway and say what happened. Phishbee tells the person what to do next, like changing a password or stopping a payment before it goes out, and the message is marked high risk on your organization’s dashboard so the right people can follow up. Acting in the first hour makes the biggest difference.

We're a credit union. Can we offer this to our members?

That is exactly where we are headed first. We are piloting member protection with credit unions and membership organizations: members forward suspicious messages from their personal email and get the same plain-English answer, under your organization’s name. Join the waitlist as a credit union or membership organization and we will contact you about early access.

When can I use it?

Phishbee is in early access. We onboard organizations from the waitlist in small groups. Join the list and tell us what kind of organization you are; that helps us reach you sooner.

Join the waitlist.

We onboard organizations in small groups. Tell us who you are and we will reach out when your group is up.