Review on Godeliveryinternational
The website GoDeliveryInternational.com, also known as godeliveryint.com or GoDelivery International, advertises itself as a shipping and logistics company. It appears to assist clients with customs, insurance, and transit when shipping goods—and occasionally pets or live animals—across international boundaries. However, a number of reports from users and other sources strongly imply that it is a hoax. The website seems to entice victims by guaranteeing dependable delivery, then either requesting further fees (sometimes frequently) or simply vanishing once payment has been received.
In this analysis, I go over the website's claims, warning signs that point to fraud, customer complaints, and why it should be viewed with the utmost caution.
Notable Keypoints to note on godeliveryinternational
Association with pet-delivery / pet shipping scams The site has been flagged on pet scam directories as part of a fraudulent scheme targeting people seeking to ship pets. The scheme typically involves charging fees (for “animal insurance,” “shipping,” “customs clearance”) without ever delivering the animal.
No credible reviews, complaints, or independent verification There is virtually no trustworthy, verifiable feedback from genuine customers saying their goods arrived. A lack of positive, verifiable user testimonials is a warning. Confusion between similar names / misattribution
Stolen content, reused templates Scam-watch sites note that content (e.g. images, text) may be reused from other pet shipping scams. This is a common tactic to save effort and reduce originality.
No trace of legal or business registration A legitimate international logistics company would typically show evidence of business registration in one or more countries, licensing, customs affiliations, warehousing partners, etc. I found no such evidence for GoDeliveryInternational.
Matching classic scam script
The site mirrors the “package/delivery scam” template: telling victims their goods (or pet) are stuck in customs or need extra fees to be released. This is a well-documented scam type in consumer protection literature.
The use of multiple variants of the domain (e.g. godeliveryint.com) is a strategy scammers employ to avoid detection when one domain gets blacklisted.
Absence of credible business footprint
No verifiable track record of actual shipments.
No third-party certifications, no references to shipping partners (like DHL, FedEx, border authorities), which any legitimate logistics company would likely include to bolster trust.
Reports already flagging it
Pet scam directories explicitly call out godeliveryint.com as a pet shipping scam.
The pattern of “pay us insurance, pay us for shipping, we disappear” is already documented.
The operators use contact info which is reused in other scam sites. The phone number and email show up in scam reports, not logistics references.
Victim psychology and technique
The site exploits emotional attachment (pet shipping, for example). People are often less rational when it comes to beloved animals.
They employ escalating pressure tactics: you pay a little now, you’ll pay more later, and the communication is constructed to seem plausible (customs, veterinary certificates, etc.).
The eventual disappearance or blocking of communication is typical: once enough funds are collected, the scammer cuts off contact.
Practical inability to verify or track
If you try to track the shipment, the tracking number or status will either not exist, mimic generic “in transit” messages or refer you to their internal system (which they control).
Attempts to contact “support” may fail, go unanswered, or lead to more payment demands.
Given all this, calling it a legitimate shipping business lacks credible support. The balance of evidence supports that GoDeliveryInternational.com is operating as a scam.