You found a conference, received a Call for Papers, or saw an ad online. Before you submit your paper or pay any fee — here's how to check if it's real.
Check any conference in 3 simple steps:
If you don't have time for a full investigation, these six checks catch 90% of predatory conferences:
Here's how typical conferences would be evaluated:
A department at IIT Madras announces a national conference on their official department website. The conference has Springer LNCS proceedings, named faculty conveners with institutional email addresses, and archived proceedings from three previous editions.
Why it's safe: Institutional organiser, verifiable committee, published track record, legitimate publisher partnership. ScholarVault Trust Score: typically 75-95.
You receive an email for "4th International Conference on Engineering, Science, Technology, and Management" in Goa. The website looks professional, lists a ₹12,000 registration fee, and claims papers will be published in "Scopus-indexed journals." The committee lists names from various institutions.
Why it's suspicious: Extremely broad scope (covers every discipline), unsolicited email, claims journal publication (conferences publish proceedings, not journal articles), high fee. ScholarVault Trust Score: typically 30-55.
A website advertises "National Conference on Recent Advances in [Everything]" with events in Chennai, Delhi, Kolkata, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Pune, Jaipur, and Lucknow — all in the same month. Registration is ₹25,000. Acceptance is guaranteed within 48 hours. Payment is via personal UPI ID.
Why it's not recommended: Conference mill pattern (identical events across cities), guaranteed acceptance, personal payment channels, no verifiable academic substance. ScholarVault Trust Score: typically 5-25.
The most common way researchers encounter predatory conferences. Mass emails with subject lines like "Call for Papers — Scopus Indexed — Early Bird Deadline" are sent to thousands of researchers harvested from published papers and ResearchGate profiles. Rule of thumb: If you didn't seek out the conference yourself, verify it before responding.
Sites like allconferencealert.com, conferencealerts.co.in, and nationalconference.org.in aggregate conference listings without verification. Being listed on these sites does NOT confirm legitimacy. Anyone can pay to list their event. Always cross-verify using ScholarVault or manual checks.
Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn ads for conferences are increasingly common. Predatory organisers use targeted advertising to reach researchers in specific fields. Professional-looking ads are not proof of legitimacy. Check the conference website and organisers independently.
Academic WhatsApp groups frequently share conference announcements. While some are genuine tips from colleagues, others are planted by conference promoters. Verify any conference shared in a WhatsApp group before acting on it.
When you paste a conference URL into ScholarVault, our 18-point forensic audit engine automatically checks:
The result is a Trust Score (0–100) and a clear verdict: Safe, Suspicious, or Not Recommended — with a detailed breakdown of each check.
Paste any conference URL and get a Trust Score in 12 seconds. It's free to start — no credit card required.
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