BoxGifted.com is a risky reward-style website using an Amazon Rewards Program and $500 Amazon gift card lure. Do not enter your name, email, phone number, address, card details, or gift card code on the page. Gridinsoft Website Reputation Checker classifies boxgifted.com as a scam website with a very low trust score, and the safest response is to close the page, avoid the claim flow, and secure any information you already submitted.
The page may look like a quick prize claim: a timer, a short survey, a gift box, a fake “selected winner” message, or a form asking for contact details. That does not make it an Amazon promotion. Real Amazon gift card help and scam guidance lives on Amazon-owned domains, not on a new third-party site that asks you to complete a reward claim.

Why BoxGifted.com Looks Risky
Gridinsoft’s scan of boxgifted.com shows several scam indicators: the site is classified as Scam Website, the trust score is 1/100, the domain was only days old at the time of the check, and the report notes gift-card and fake-social-link risk signals. Those are exactly the kind of signals that matter for reward pages, because the visitor is usually asked to trust the site before receiving anything real.
The strongest warning is the mismatch between the promise and the domain. A page can write “Amazon Rewards Program” or “$500 gift card” in large letters, but boxgifted.com is not an Amazon domain. If a promotion asks you to claim an Amazon gift card outside Amazon’s own website or app, treat it as unverified until proven otherwise.
Red Flags On The BoxGifted Reward Page
- Third-party domain: the page uses
boxgifted.com, not an Amazon-owned domain. - Large reward for little effort: a $500 gift card promise is used to push quick action.
- Data-collection form: reward scams often ask for name, email, phone number, address, birth date, or payment details before anything is delivered.
- Timer or urgency: countdowns and “offer expires” messages are used to stop people from checking the site first.
- Fake trust signals: reward pages often use generic badges, social proof, or fake comments instead of verifiable promotion rules.
- Redirect chain: some pages send visitors through surveys, affiliate offers, or lead-generation forms rather than a real gift card redemption.
If you are comparing this with other Amazon-themed fraud, our Amazon scams guide covers fake orders, refunds, account warnings, and gift-card tricks. We also have a broader guide to online scam red flags that applies to prize and reward pages.
What Not To Enter On BoxGifted.com
Do not enter or upload any of the following:
- Amazon login email or password;
- gift card claim codes, PINs, or card photos;
- credit card, bank, PayPal, Cash App, Zelle, or crypto-wallet details;
- home address, date of birth, Social Security number, or ID photos;
- phone number if the page says it is needed to “verify” your reward;
- permission to show browser notifications or install a browser extension.
Amazon warns that scammers commonly use Amazon gift cards and other brands’ gift cards in fraud attempts, while the FTC says gift cards are for gifts, not payments or prize fees. A real prize should not require you to buy a gift card, reveal a claim code, or pay a verification fee before receiving the reward.
If You Only Opened The Page
If you only opened BoxGifted.com and did not type anything, buy anything, allow notifications, install an extension, or download a file, the practical risk is lower. Close the tab, do not return through ads or social links, and clear site data for the domain if the page keeps reappearing.
If the page asked to show notifications and you clicked Allow, remove the permission in Chrome, Edge, Firefox, or Safari. Browser notification spam can imitate antivirus warnings, shipping alerts, or reward reminders even after the original page is closed.
If You Submitted Information
- Stop interacting with the page. Do not complete more surveys or payment steps to “unlock” the gift card.
- Change reused passwords. If you typed an Amazon password or any password reused elsewhere, change it from the real Amazon site or app.
- Check Amazon account activity. Review orders, payment methods, addresses, gift card balance, archived orders, and login devices.
- Watch email and SMS. Expect follow-up phishing if you entered contact details.
- Contact your bank or card issuer. Do this if you entered payment details or paid a shipping, verification, survey, or prize fee.
- Report gift-card loss quickly. If you gave a gift card number or PIN, report it to the gift card company and keep the card and receipt.
- Scan the device if anything downloaded. Use Gridinsoft Anti-Malware if the page pushed an installer, extension, notification spam, or repeated redirects.
What Happens To Your Email Or Phone Number?
Reward pages are often used for lead collection. Even if no malware is installed, the submitted email or phone number can be used for more fake prizes, delivery texts, fake Amazon security alerts, survey spam, or phishing calls. If the same phone number is used for banking or Amazon account recovery, be extra careful with one-time-code messages after submitting it.
Do not reply to follow-up texts that claim your reward is pending. Open Amazon manually from your saved app or typed address instead. If the message includes a link, check it with Gridinsoft Website Reputation Checker before opening it.
Remove BoxGifted Pop-Ups Or Notifications
If BoxGifted-style alerts keep appearing after you close the page, check browser permissions first. Remove notification permission for boxgifted.com and any unknown sites allowed around the same time. Then check extensions and recently installed apps if the redirects continue.
For similar fake reward pages, compare our Fake Walmart Gift Card Reward guide and Google Membership Rewards scam article. If the page turns into fake virus warnings, use our fake virus alert cleanup guide.
FAQ
Is BoxGifted.com an official Amazon Rewards Program?
No evidence found in this run showed BoxGifted.com as an official Amazon domain or Amazon-operated reward page. Treat the site as unverified and unsafe for personal or payment details.
Can I get a real $500 Amazon gift card from BoxGifted.com?
Do not count on it. The site is built around a high-value reward lure, and Gridinsoft classifies the domain as a scam website. Real gift card promotions should have verifiable rules, sponsor identity, and redemption through trusted channels.
What if I entered my email or phone number?
Expect more spam or phishing. Do not click follow-up reward links, do not share verification codes, and watch for fake Amazon, delivery, or payment messages.
What if I gave an Amazon gift card code?
Contact Amazon or the gift card issuer immediately, keep the card and receipt, and report the scam. The FTC recommends reporting gift-card scams quickly and asking whether the company can freeze or recover funds.
Should I scan my computer?
Scan if you downloaded a file, installed an extension, allowed browser notifications, or keep seeing redirects/pop-ups after closing the page. A simple visit without interaction is usually handled by closing the page and clearing site data.
References
- Amazon Customer Service. “Common Gift Card Scams.” Amazon.com, accessed June 11, 2026. https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=GGKDN3QZSKBFGNBF
- Amazon Customer Service. “About Amazon.com Gift Card Restrictions and Prohibited Activities.” Amazon.com, accessed June 11, 2026. https://www.amazon.com/gp/help/customer/display.html?nodeId=G7KXB4EYEHXZRUMA
- Federal Trade Commission. “Avoiding and Reporting Gift Card Scams.” Consumer Advice, accessed June 11, 2026. https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/avoiding-and-reporting-gift-card-scams

