Let’s talk about LegitiMiners.com—because someone has to.
They claim they’re a “trusted and industry leading crypto mining platform.” They say they’ve got “real Bitcoin farms,” that you’ll earn 2.5% daily profits, and that everything is “automated, secure, and built for your future.”
Well, I’ve read the site, I’ve broken it down, and I’m calling it what it really is:
A scam. A Ponzi. A shiny fake storefront designed to lure in investors and cash out before the truth catches up.
Let me walk you through it.
The Website Is a Template of Lies
From the second you land on LegitiMiners.com, you’re hit with bold promises and buzzwords:
- “Fastest & secure company to mine Bitcoin”
- “Powered by real Bitcoin farms”
- “CoinPayments is our partner”
- “Your dreams will come true”
Let’s translate all that:
There is no evidence of any mining. No facility. No address that checks out. No verification. Just promises—designed to emotionally bait the desperate and uninformed.
They say they’re in the UK?
The listed address—29 Well Ln, Willerby, Hull—is a residential property. Nothing shows up under Companies House. No incorporation number. Just a borrowed postcode and a prayer that you don’t Google it.
They Promise the Impossible
Let’s get something clear: No legitimate mining operation offers 2–2.5% daily guaranteed profits.
At those rates, your money would double every 30–40 days. That’s not investing—that’s math defying madness. And it’s a red flag used by every HYIP (High-Yield Investment Program) scam before it collapses.
The Gmail Address Tells You Everything
Here’s the real kicker:
The official email listed on the site is [email protected].
Think about that.
Would a real global mining operation be using a Gmail account?
No. They wouldn’t. That’s amateur hour. That’s burner-account territory. That’s how scammers hide their tracks.
You’re not dealing with a company—you’re dealing with a few people behind a cheap website, using an untraceable email to take your money and disappear.
The Terms and Conditions Are a Scam in Themselves
Buried in the small print, they say:
“We are not responsible for any loss you incur.”
In other words—they can steal your money and say it’s your fault.
You agree to that when you sign up. That’s how these scams protect themselves while pretending to be legitimate.
They even threaten to freeze your funds if you create more than one account or use different IPs. Why? Because they’re terrified of people testing the system and exposing the fraud.
They Don’t Mine—They Recruit
And this is the punchline.
“Invite your friends and earn 2% of their investments.”
That’s not a referral program. That’s a pyramid scheme.
There’s no product, no mining dashboard, no evidence of actual earnings. Just money flowing from new victims to old ones—until the system runs dry and the site disappears.
Oh, and They’re Releasing a Coin (Of Course)
They say a LegitiMiners coin is coming in Q3 2024. That’s their exit strategy.
Rebrand the scam, slap a new token on it, pump it, dump it, and run.
This is how every dying Ponzi tries to stay alive. When returns slow down and questions pile up, they announce a new “opportunity.”
It’s not innovation. It’s delay and deflection.
So What Do You Do Now?
If you’ve invested in LegitiMiners:
- Stop right now.
- Do not reinvest.
- Do not refer friends or family.
- Take screenshots of everything.
- File reports with ScamAdviser, Action Fraud (UK), or your local regulator.
If you haven’t yet—you just dodged a bullet.
Final Word: This Is a SCAM. Period.
LegitiMiners is not a mining company.
It’s a faceless, anonymous, unregulated scam hiding behind crypto jargon, fake UK credentials, and emotional manipulation.
And I’m here to make sure they don’t get away with it.
Because one thing’s certain—if they’re offering 2.5% daily, it’s not mining… it’s stealing.
About the Author Danny de Hek, also known as The Crypto Ponzi Scheme Avenger, is a New Zealand-based investigative journalist specializing in exposing crypto fraud, Ponzi schemes, and MLM scams. His work has been featured by Bloomberg, The New York Times, The Guardian Australia, ABC News Australia, and other international outlets.
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My work exposing crypto fraud has been featured in:
- Bloomberg Documentary (2025): A 20-minute exposé on Ponzi schemes and crypto card fraud
- News.com.au (2025): Profiled as one of the leading scam-busters in Australasia
- The Press / Stuff.co.nz (2023): Successfully defeated $3.85M gag lawsuit; court ruled it was a vexatious attempt to silence whistleblowing.
- The Guardian Australia (2023): National warning on crypto MLMs affecting Aussie families
- ABC News Australia (2023): Investigation into Blockchain Global and its collapse
- The New York Times (2022): A full two-page feature on dismantling HyperVerse and its global network
- Radio New Zealand (2022): “The Kiwi YouTuber Taking Down Crypto Scammers From His Christchurch Home”
- Otago Daily Times (2022): A profile on my investigative work and the impact of crypto fraud in New Zealand
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