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Meta Business Manager Partner Request Scam: How to Spot & Avoid It

Meta Business Manager Partner Request Scam: How to Spot & Avoid It

⚠️ Scam Alert

The Fake Meta Business Manager Partner Request

Scammers are sending legitimate-looking emails to hijack your Facebook ad accounts. Here’s exactly how the scam works — and how to stop it.

If you manage Facebook Pages or run ads, your inbox may be filling up with emails that look exactly like official Meta notifications — claiming someone has sent you a “Business Manager partner request.” Most of them are scammers trying to gain access to your ad accounts and your money. Here’s what’s really going on.


A Real Example, Dissected

⚠️ Scam Email Example

From: Facebook <noreply@business.facebook.com>
Subject: You’ve received a Business Manager partner request

🔷 Meta for Business

“The Meta’s Agency Network helps agencies scale faster, any other Program is not part of or affiliated with Meta.”

🚩 Red flag: Awkward grammar — not how Meta writes.

You’ve received a partner request. This request is from:

🏢 Agency Partner Invoice
account01.agency-access-system.com
🚩 Red flag: Fake third-party domain — not a real Meta partner.

Go to Meta Business Suite to view the request…

[View request button]
🚩 Red flag: Links to a real Facebook URL — but the requester itself is fake.


How the Scam Works, Step by Step

Step 1: They send a real Meta notification

Scammers actually create a fake Business Manager account and send you a genuine partner request through Meta’s system. The email comes from a real Facebook server — making it pass spam filters and look completely legitimate.

Step 2: The requester has a sketchy domain

The business name or website looks official but isn’t. Look for red flags like:

  • account01.agency-access-system.com
  • meta-partner-invoice.net
  • fb-agency-billing.com

Step 3: You accept — and hand them the keys

If you approve the partner request, the scammer’s Business Manager gets access to your Pages and ad accounts. They can immediately start running ads on your dime or hold your assets hostage.

Step 4: The damage — fake ads, drained budgets, extortion

Victims report thousands of dollars in fraudulent ad spend charged to their cards, pages promoting scams under their brand, and demands for payment to restore access.


Red Flags in Every Scam Email

🌐 Third-party domain name

Legitimate partners will have a real, recognizable business website — not something like agency-access-system.com or invoice-partner-fb.net.

✍️ Broken grammar

Phrases like “The Meta’s Agency Network” are tells. Meta’s actual communications are professionally written and don’t have odd grammar.

📩 No prior relationship

Did you reach out to this agency first? If you didn’t initiate contact, be very suspicious of any unsolicited partner request.

🔥 Urgency or threats

Messages warning that your Page “is at risk” or will be disabled unless you act now are classic pressure tactics. Meta doesn’t work this way.

💳 Requests for payment info

Meta will never ask for payment or personal details via email. Any follow-up asking for your card info is an immediate scam signal.

🏷️ Generic business name

Names like “Agency Partner Invoice” or “Meta Verified Partner” with no real identity behind them are fabricated to sound official.


How to Protect Your Business Account

  • Don’t click “View Request” in the email. Go directly to business.facebook.com and check your partner requests from there instead.
  • Verify every requester independently. Google the company name and domain. A real agency will have a real web presence, reviews, and contact info.
  • Decline and report unknown requests. In Meta Business Suite → Settings → Partners, you can decline and block unknown requesters.
  • Enable two-factor authentication on your Meta account and all admin accounts connected to your Business Manager.
  • Audit your existing partners regularly. Remove any businesses from your Business Manager that you don’t recognize or no longer work with.
  • Report the scam to Meta at facebook.com/help/contact/1582364792025146 so they can shut down the fraudulent account.

Share this with anyone who manages a Facebook Page or runs ads. 👆

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Web Blogger

CISSP · Founder, Apply QA, LLC

Cybersecurity expert and CISSP-certified professional with years of experience in identity protection, fraud prevention, and software quality engineering. Author of Identity and Data Protection for the Average Person and founder of ScamSave.

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