Why “pay someone to do my exam” starts to sound tempting
Most students don’t plan to cheat. It usually comes after weeks of feeling stuck.
Typical things that push people towards “do my exam” sites:
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You’ve left revision late and can’t see how to catch up.
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You’re juggling shifts and study and feel permanently tired.
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You’ve failed before and the thought of failing again makes you feel sick.
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You don’t fully understand the module and feel embarrassed to ask.
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Stuff at home or with money has taken over and uni has slipped.
So when you see ads saying “100% pass, we sit the exam for you”, it sounds simple. But those adverts never show you the other side.
How universities see it: rules and academic misconduct
From a university point of view, paying someone to sit your exam isn’t “getting help” – it’s academic misconduct.
It normally falls under things like:
If you’re caught, outcomes can include:
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A mark of zero for the exam
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Failing the whole module
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Being forced to resit with a capped mark
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In serious cases, suspension or being removed from the course
In the UK, the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA) talks about this as contract cheating and treats it as a direct threat to academic integrity and the value of degrees. You can see their student-facing advice on academic integrity here: QAA academic integrity resources.
So when a website tells you “no risk”, that’s simply not true.
“Surely they can’t tell it wasn’t me?”
A lot of sites try to calm you down with lines like “We’ve never had a student caught”. That doesn’t match how universities now work with online exams.
Depending on the system your uni uses, they may be able to look at:
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Log-in details and where you were logged in from
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How long you spend on each question
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Whether your writing style suddenly changes
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Screen recordings or webcam footage, if the exam is proctored
Even if your exam isn’t heavily monitored, you’re still relying on a stranger to turn up on time, know your subject and care about your result. That’s a lot of trust for someone you’ve just messaged on WhatsApp.
The risks nobody puts in their adverts
1. Academic damage
If the person you hire doesn’t really understand the module, you might:
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Get answers that sound confident but are completely wrong
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Hit plagiarism checks because they’ve copied from somewhere else
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End up under investigation if your mark looks suspicious compared to your past work
You might scrape a pass now, but you’ll still be lost in later modules that build on this content.
2. Money and data problems
To “pay someone to do my exam”, you often have to give:
Once they have that, they can:
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Take your money and vanish
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Ask for more money and threaten to report you if you refuse
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Misuse your details for other things you never agreed to
You can’t exactly go to your bank or the police and say, “I paid someone to cheat for me and they scammed me.” You’re stuck.
3. Impact on your future and how you feel
Even if nothing blows up straight away:
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You might feel you “cheated your way through” and doubt your own ability.
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You’ll be more likely to look for shortcuts again when things get hard.
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If you’re going into a regulated profession (nursing, teaching, social work, law, etc.), any record of serious misconduct can cause problems later.
Degrees aren’t just bits of paper. For many jobs, your uni work is linked to trust and safety. That’s why universities take this so seriously.
Safer alternatives when you’re struggling
Saying “don’t cheat” on its own isn’t helpful. Here’s what you can actually try instead.
1. Be honest (in a simple way) with your module tutor
You don’t have to write a full life story. A short, direct message can work, for example:
“I’m really behind on this module and I’m worried about the exam. I’ve been struggling with [work/health/family]. Is there any guidance or past questions I should focus on now?”
You might get:
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Clearer advice on which topics matter most
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Revision tips or extra resources
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Reassurance that you’re not the only one feeling this way
2. Ask about extensions or special circumstances
If you have genuine issues – illness, bereavement, mental health, caring responsibilities, serious money problems – your uni may have:
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Mitigating / extenuating circumstances forms
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Options to sit the exam at a later date
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Adjustments through disability or wellbeing services
You might not get everything you ask for, but it’s still a better route than handing your exam to a stranger.
3. Use support that helps you prepare, not pretend to be you
There’s a big difference between:
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A stranger logging in as you and sitting the exam, and
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Someone helping you revise, practise and plan while you sit it
Your university may already offer:
On top of that, you can use a private online exam help service that stays on the right side of the rules. For example, our online exam help is designed to:
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Break the syllabus into manageable pieces
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Explain topics in plain English
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Go through practice questions similar to your exam
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Help you plan how to use your time in the exam
You stay in control. Nobody logs in as you, and your work is still yours.
4. If the exam is soon and you’re in full panic mode
If the exam is close and you’re already searching “do my exam” at stupid o’clock, try this instead of firing money at the first site you see:
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Pick your key topics. Use your module guide to choose the most likely areas.
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Make short notes. One side of A4 per topic if you can – definitions, formulas, key cases or theories.
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Practise a tiny bit. Write out one or two practice answers or plans, even if they’re rough.
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Sort your set-up. Quiet space, charger, Wi-Fi, log-in details, water, basic snacks.
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Sleep. Even a few hours will help you think more clearly than an all-nighter.
It might not give you a top grade, but it keeps you on the right side of the rules and stops one exam turning into a full-blown case with the academic misconduct panel.
What if I’ve already spoken to a “pay to do my exam” site?
If you’ve already messaged someone or even paid a deposit, you still have choices.
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You can change your mind and sit the exam yourself.
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If you gave them your password, change it straight away.
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Block them on social media and messaging apps if they become pushy or aggressive.
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If you feel unsafe or pressured, speak to your uni’s wellbeing or student support team and explain in simple terms what has happened.
It’s better to deal with it now than wait for things to get messy later.
Final thoughts
Wanting to pay someone to do my exam usually comes from stress, not laziness. You’re tired, you’re worried, and you just want it over with.
But the “easy” option comes with heavy strings attached: risk to your degree, your money, your data and your future.
You do have other routes:
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Asking for real help from your course team
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Using study support and proper revision help
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Getting structured exam preparation while still sitting the exam yourself
Take a breath, look at the bigger picture, and choose the option that lets you pass with a clear head and a clean record.