"No human verification" sounds like a shortcut to free coins. In reality, it is just a different scam format — one that skips straight to credential theft without the survey detour. Here is the full picture.
Sites advertising "no human verification" free coins are among the most dangerous — they skip the survey step and go directly after your account or device.
eFootball coins cannot be generated externally regardless of what verification process is used
"No verification" sites typically use credential harvesting forms disguised as delivery systems
Some use browser exploits to install tracking software without any user interaction
The "no verification" promise is bait to seem more legitimate than survey-based scams
Players who interact with these sites risk account theft, malware, and data breaches
Sites skipping "human verification" often jump straight to a login form claiming to need your details to "deliver" the coins. This is the credential theft phase.
"Get 99,999 coins in 60 seconds" is technically impossible given Konami's server architecture. Instant delivery claims signal a scam every time.
While this sounds safer, "no download" sites instead use browser-based attacks: session hijacking scripts, malicious redirect chains, or phishing forms.
Fake comment sections with bot accounts saying "worked for me!" are standard on these sites. The bots are automated scripts — no real person ever received coins.
The only guaranteed, instant way to add coins — through Google Play or App Store in-app purchases.
Participate in official in-game events that distribute free coins as rewards. Check the in-game news for active campaigns.
Climbing divisions earns season-end coin and player rewards. Competitive grind that pays off legitimately.
The fastest real alternative: purchase a verified account from efootballmarket.com that already has a large coin balance.
"No human verification" is used as a marketing hook to differentiate from other scam sites that demand surveys. Sites advertising this claim typically skip the survey gate and instead go straight for your account credentials or install malware directly.
Neither is safe. "No verification" sites are actually more dangerous because they often harvest your login credentials directly without the survey buffer, meaning your account is stolen faster. The absence of verification is not a feature — it is a different attack vector.
Yes, but only through official channels: daily login milestones, limited-time events, Division match rewards, and special campaigns. These are free, safe, and reliable, even if slower than paying for coins.