This is one of the few questions in a job search with a flat, no-exceptions answer. You should never pay to get a job. Not a small fee, not a refundable deposit, not a "you will be reimbursed" purchase. The moment a job requires money out of your pocket to begin, it is the advance-fee scam.
The shapes it takes
Scammers dress the upfront payment in whatever sounds reasonable for the role:
- Training or certification you must buy before you can start.
- Equipment - a laptop, a headset, a "secure" phone - you are told to purchase from a specific vendor.
- A starter or welcome kit for a remote role.
- A background check or "processing fee" you are asked to cover yourself.
- Software or a subscription required to do the work.
- A deposit that will supposedly be returned in your first paycheck.
The cover story varies; the structure does not. Money leaves you before any money reaches you.
The rule, with no exceptions: if you must pay to start, it is a scam. "We will reimburse you" does not change this. The reimbursement either never comes or arrives as a fake check that reverses later, leaving you out both amounts.
What a real employer actually does
Legitimate companies treat the cost of equipping you as their cost of doing business. They ship you a laptop, set up a company account, provide training on their own systems, and pay for any background screening they require - after a written offer, through a named provider, with your consent. If reimbursement is involved, it is for expenses they asked you to incur on their account, processed through real payroll, not a wire to a stranger.
The FTC puts it plainly: honest employers do not ask you to pay for the promise of a job.
How to respond
You do not owe anyone a payment to be considered for work. If asked, decline and verify:
"I do not pay to start a job. If this role is real, I am happy to proceed through your official onboarding once I have a written offer."
Then confirm the company independently: find the role on the employer's official careers page, check the recruiter's email domain, or paste the message into the free checker. A real employer will not lose your application over this. A scammer will pressure you or move on.
If you already paid, act quickly - the steps are in I already gave a scammer my information or money - what now?.