25 May 2026 · 8 min read
The psychic market attracts both the best and the worst. Between ethical practitioners with years of experience and scammers exploiting vulnerability, how to sort? Five positive signs and five red flags, based on observing hundreds of profiles and client feedback.
By Jonathan Petit · Fondateur d'Espace Voyance
The simplest and most powerful marker of a psychic's reliability: their ability to acknowledge the limits of their perception. A good practitioner doesn't fill the silence to give the illusion of continuous reading. They accept that a topic isn't coming through today, and they say so clearly.
It's paradoxically a sign of seriousness, not weakness. A psychic who "sees everything" on every topic — your past, future, career, love life, health, children — in 20 minutes, is probably doing cold reading or confabulation. Extrasensory perception, like any human skill, has **blind spots** and **off days**.
A few formulations heard from good practitioners:
— "I'm not catching anything precise on this person, can we explore another angle?"
— "This question is too broad, I can give you an impression but not a detail."
— "I sense something around this topic, but it's blurry — I'd rather not make things up."
Conversely, a psychic producing categorical assertions without nuance on every topic you raise should awaken your wariness. No one is expert in everything, especially not in extrasensory perception.
**Cold reading** is the number-one technique of fake psychics. The principle: ask general questions, observe the client's reactions (tone, hesitations, what they say), then "guess" information the person actually just delivered without realizing.
Typical scammer example: "I see an important masculine figure in your life… would it be your father, maybe a grandfather?" If you answer "my father," the "psychic" continues as if they'd known. If you answer "my grandfather," they say "yes, that's the one I'm sensing." In both cases, they just **bounced off your answer**.
A real psychic does the opposite. They deliver **precise information before you've spoken**: "I see a masculine figure, around 70 years old, wearing glasses, rather tall, with a calm presence." If that matches your grandfather, you validate. If it doesn't match anyone, the psychic accepts and changes angle — they don't try to reinterpret to make it fit.
The simple rule: **a good psychic delivers first, you validate after**. A fake psychic asks questions and reformulates based on your answers.
Serious psychics follow a **practice ethic** comparable to a therapist's. Several principles recur among good practitioners:
**No precise medical prediction.** A psychic announcing "you'll have cancer in 2 years" or "your child will have an accident on March 15th" exceeds their scope and causes unnecessary anxiety. Good practitioners redirect to a doctor if the question is medical.
**No promise of a partner's return within X days.** The great classic scam: "I can bring back your ex in 7 days, but it requires a special ritual — €300." No ethical psychic promises to manipulate a third party's will. It's both irresponsible and legally questionable.
**No unnecessary anxiety.** A good psychic seeing a coming difficulty tells you with measure, proposing paths through it. They don't leave you panicking.
**Redirection to other professionals.** The right reflex when the situation exceeds the psychic frame: "For this question, I'd suggest you consult a psychologist / lawyer / doctor." A psychic claiming to handle everything (mental health, legal disputes, financial decisions) is a red flag.
**Respect for free will.** The psychic illuminates, they don't decide for you. Beware of practitioners imperatively telling you what to do.
Not all reviews are equal. Several signals distinguish a reliable review system:
**Volume and regularity.** A psychic with 5 reviews all posted in the same week of 2024 probably commissioned them. A psychic with 80 reviews spread over 18 months is credible. Regularity is a better indicator than raw volume.
**Detail of reviews.** Favor reviews recounting what happened: "The psychic saw a seaside trip I hadn't mentioned, confirmed two weeks later." That's concrete, factual, verifiable. Conversely, generic reviews ("great, thanks, recommended") are easy to fabricate.
**Presence of mixed reviews.** A profile with only 5-star reviews is suspect — either the practitioner filters negative feedback, or they're commissioned. A good profile has 90% 4-5 stars **and** some 3-star reviews with nuanced feedback ("the consultation was good but not exceptional"). That's the real human distribution.
**Traceability.** On Espace Voyance, each review is linked to a client who actually paid for a consultation — no fakes possible. Check if your platform has this mechanism, or if anyone can post a review without having consulted.
**Psychic's responses to reviews.** A psychic responding to reviews (positive and negative) with sobriety and professionalism is a good sign. Aggressive or defensive responses to negative reviews are a red flag — it reveals how the psychic handles feedback.
The last marker, and probably the most important: a good psychic **never pushes you to consult again**. At the end of the session, they don't say "we absolutely must meet next week or the energies will block." They say "here's what I sense is useful for you now; if you want to deepen a point, you know where to find me."
A few red flags on the commercial pressure side:
**Artificial urgency.** "You need a ritual before the next full moon, that's in 3 days, otherwise it'll be too late."
**Instilled fear.** "There's a curse on your family, it absolutely must be lifted, otherwise your children will suffer."
**Complex and opaque offers.** "For this topic, you need a special 7-session package at €500, plus esoteric materials to buy."
**Frequent phone follow-ups** after a consultation, especially if you didn't request to be called back.
**Automatic subscriptions** hard to cancel — classic pattern of old-school psychic lines.
A healthy consultation is a simple transaction: you pay per minute, you receive the consultation, you freely decide whether to consult again. No subscription, no follow-up, no pressure. That's precisely Espace Voyance's commitment: no subscription, no commitment, no commercial follow-up.
Conversely, here are the signals that almost certainly indicate a scam:
**1. Promises of specific results.** "I'll bring back your ex in 14 days," "You'll win the lottery next month," "You'll find a job before Christmas." No ethical psychic makes this kind of promise — it's even contrary to all serious practice.
**2. Mention of curses or evil spells.** "Someone close to you has cast a spell. You absolutely need a un-cursing (€300) or your finances will collapse." That's the number-one scam in the sector. Good psychics NEVER talk about curses to be lifted in exchange for payment.
**3. Opaque and escalating pricing.** First call free, then rates climbing as you're engaged. Or a €30 consultation becoming €300 at the end because "extra work was needed." Real psychics show their rates clearly and charge per minute or a fixed flat fee.
**4. Request for personal items or cash/crypto payments.** Photo of the targeted person, lock of hair, Western Union transfer, bitcoin payment… None of these signals are compatible with legitimate practice. Real psychics use traceable payments and don't need items from the person to work remotely.
**5. Total anonymity of the practitioner.** No name, no photo, no bio, no traceable reviews — just a premium-rate phone line. Real psychics own their identity (at least a first name and a photo) and accept being publicly evaluated by clients.
**In case of doubt**: check the profile on Espace Voyance (or any platform with traceable public reviews), compare rates with market average (€1.80 to €3.50/min for professional psychic work), and trust your instinct. If something seems too good or too alarming, it's probably a scam.
Three quick checks: read the profile carefully (factual or alarmist vocabulary?), consult detailed public reviews (volume, regularity, presence of nuanced reviews), and check pricing transparency (per-minute rate shown, no hidden fees). On Espace Voyance, each psychic is vetted before activation and each review is linked to a real client.
Not all, but the vast majority yes — especially if they offer a paid "un-cursing ritual" on top of the consultation. It's one of the most widespread scams in the sector. Real psychics may mention heavy energies or blocks, but never ask for money to "lift" them.
On average between €1.80 and €3.50 per minute for a professional online practitioner, i.e. €35-100 for a typical 20-30 minute consultation. In a physical office, rates are often flat (€50-150 per session). Beware of rates too low (mass-marketing or scam signal) as well as very high (>€5/min) without clear justification.
Stop the consultation immediately — you have the right, and on Espace Voyance per-minute billing means you only pay for time consumed. Note suspicious elements (unrealistic promises, mention of curse, request for personal items, commercial pressure) and report the profile to the platform via the dedicated button.
No reliability difference. The practitioner's gender isn't a quality criterion — experience, ethics and reviews matter infinitely more. Many clients have a personal preference (some feel more comfortable with a specific gender, especially for intimate topics), that's legitimate. But don't base your choice on that.
No. No psychic is 100% accurate — extrasensory perception has limits. A good practitioner typically reaches 70-80% accuracy on verifiable elements; the rest can be less clear. The difference between an honest psychic who's sometimes wrong and a scammer: the first owns it ("I'm not catching"), the second invents to fill.
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