How to spot a ghost job in 30 seconds (the Indeed problem in 2026)
Half the jobs on the major boards are not actually hiring. Here is how to tell which.
Two viral threads on Reddit this week — one in r/jobs, one in r/UKJobs — described the same pattern. Half the listings on Indeed and similar boards are evergreen, fake, scams, or "warm bodies, not hiring." A user who applied to dozens reported that 50% of postings in their field turned out to be ghosts.
You can spend an hour on a tailored cover letter for a posting where there is literally no role to fill. The application goes into a black hole. You blame yourself. You should not — the posting was already fake when you found it.
Here is the 30-second check that tells you whether a posting is real before you spend the application energy.
Quick answer: real jobs have a specific named hiring manager or recruiter, a posting age under 30 days, and a company careers page that lists the same role. Fake jobs are anonymous, have been live for 60+ days, and disappear when you check the company website directly.
The 5 signals of a ghost job
- Posting age over 60 days. Real roles get filled or the company gives up. A 90-day-old posting that has been "renewed" is almost certainly a ghost — the platform reposts it to keep the listing fresh, but the company is not actively hiring.
- No named recruiter or hiring manager. If the contact is "Recruitment Team" or just an email like jobs@company.com, the listing is being posted by an automation. Real urgent hires have a real person attached.
- The role is not on the company's own careers page. Open the company website, go to /careers or /jobs, and search for the role title. If it is not there, the listing on Indeed/LinkedIn is either an aggregator scrape (often outdated) or a fake.
- Salary range is missing or absurdly wide. "$60k – $200k" is not a real range. Real roles have a band that the recruiter has been authorised on.
- The job description reads as generic. If the listing could apply to half the roles in your field — no team named, no product named, no specific tech stack — it is probably evergreen pipeline-building, not active hiring.
The 30-second check
- Open the listing. Note the post date.
- Open the company's actual website in another tab. Find their /careers or /jobs page.
- Search the careers page for the role title.
- If the role appears on the company careers page AND was posted in the last 30 days AND has a named contact: real, apply.
- If the role does NOT appear on the company's own careers page: probably ghost or aggregator scrape. Skip OR apply directly via the company site if you find a similar role.
- If posted 60+ days ago: probably ghost. Treat as low priority.
Why ghost jobs exist
Three reasons companies post jobs they are not actively hiring for:
- Pipeline building — they want to collect CVs in case a real opening comes up.
- Internal candidate already chosen, but legal/HR policy requires "open posting." The decision is already made.
- Aggregator drift — the original posting was real and got filled, but Indeed/LinkedIn keep showing it because the company never marked it as filled.
- Scams — rare but real, especially in remote/data-entry/admin postings. If they ask for money or personal info upfront, leave.
How to find real jobs faster
- Go to company careers pages directly, not job boards. The signal-to-noise ratio is 10x better.
- Use the "lastmod" filter on Google: search "[role title] careers [city]" with Tools → "Past month". Filters out aggregator drift.
- Build a list of 50–100 companies you would actually want to work at. Check their careers pages weekly. This beats spraying 200 applications across job boards.
- For job board postings, always cross-check on the company site before applying. 60 seconds saves you an hour of tailoring time.
Once you know the role is real, the next problem is making the application count. Vantage takes your CV and the job link, scrapes the company's actual careers page if available, generates a tailored cover letter, mock interview Qs, and fit score in 90 seconds. Genuinely free signup with 3 free analyses included.
When ghost jobs are NOT a waste
Two cases where it can still pay to apply to a possible-ghost:
- You are using the application as a way to enter the company's talent CRM. Your CV gets stored against your email; future real openings sometimes auto-match.
- You can identify the hiring manager via LinkedIn and reach out directly. The "ghost" was just an automated posting, but the team is real.
Outside those cases, ghost jobs eat your time without giving anything back. Skipping them is a strategy, not laziness.
FAQ
Are LinkedIn postings as bad as Indeed?
Slightly better but not by much. LinkedIn has the "Easy Apply" pipeline-building problem. Some companies use LinkedIn jobs purely to collect candidates, with no specific role attached. Same 30-second check applies.
Should I just stop using Indeed entirely?
No, but treat it as a discovery tool, not a primary application channel. Find roles on Indeed, then apply via the company website where possible.
How much time should I spend on each application?
Real role: 30–60 minutes (CV check, cover letter, basic prep). Possible ghost: 5 minutes max, just submit the master CV. Confirmed ghost: don't apply.
Half the postings out there are not real jobs. Spending an hour each on them is the fastest way to burn out without progress. The 30-second check is the difference.
Try Vantage: https://aimvantage.uk
Free ATS scanner: https://cv-mirror-web.vercel.app
Top comments (1)
The idea of ghost jobs being common on platforms like Indeed makes sense. It's strange how many listings lack a named contact or vanish when you check the company's site. I found that prachub.com has some great resources for technical screens that help you avoid these traps. Their question banks are closer to what recruiters actually ask compared to what you'd randomly find online. Saves hours you'd otherwise waste on fake listings.