foodieclaim.com

April 2, 2026

Foodieclaim.com Looks Like A Reward-Offer Landing Page

Foodieclaim.com presents itself as a “Sam’s Club FoodieClaim” reward site, not as a normal food blog, shopping site, or official grocery store.

The page says users can “complete simple tasks” and unlock “exclusive store rewards,” with a displayed “Points Balance” of $500 and a button that sends users forward through a “Continue” link.

The site describes a three-step process: register an email, complete 4–5 offers, and then claim a reward.

That structure is important because it means the website is built around lead collection and offer completion, not direct shopping.

The Main Promise Is A $500 Sam’s Club-Style Reward

The most visible hook on the site is the idea of a $500 Sam’s Club reward.

The page uses Sam’s Club wording, says “Member Rewards,” and tells visitors they can redeem rewards for groceries, bulk items, and more.

But the actual official Sam’s Club website is samsclub.com, where users sign in, join, shop, view savings, check benefits, and manage Sam’s Cash.

That matters because foodieclaim.com is not the same domain as Sam’s Club.

A real brand partnership should normally be easy to confirm from the official brand site, official emails, official app, or official terms page.

I did not find clear public proof from Sam’s Club itself that foodieclaim.com is an official Sam’s Club rewards program.

The Site Sends Users Through Other Domains

One notable detail is that foodieclaim.com’s “Continue” links point to linkthem.net, while its Terms, Privacy, and Contact links point to contact.uplevelrewards.com.

That does not automatically prove the site is unsafe.

Many marketing campaigns use tracking links and outside campaign platforms.

But it does make the setup less simple.

A visitor is not only dealing with foodieclaim.com.

They may also be dealing with other domains that collect data, track clicks, or show outside offers.

That is a reason to slow down before entering personal information.

Public Safety Scores Are Mixed, Not Strong

Gridinsoft gives foodieclaim.com a 52/100 trust score, which it describes as a mixed result that needs independent checking before relying on the site.

Gridinsoft also says no major malware or phishing blacklist detections were found at the time of its check, and it noted an active SSL certificate.

That is a positive point, but it is not the same as saying the offer is real.

A site can be technically clean and still use confusing reward marketing.

Gridinsoft also lists caution points, including limited independent reputation data and possible personal data collection forms.

Scam Detector gives foodieclaim.com a 51.5 medium trust score and labels it with terms such as “Questionable,” “Minimal Doubts,” and “Controversial.”

So the public safety picture is not a clear pass.

It is more like a yellow light.

The Domain Is Relatively Young

Gridinsoft reports that foodieclaim.com was created on October 7, 2024, updated on October 7, 2025, and expires on October 7, 2026.

A newer domain is not always bad.

Every real business starts with a new domain at some point.

But reward sites with big gift-card claims deserve more proof when the domain is young, the owner is privacy-protected, and the brand being used is a major retailer.

Gridinsoft also says the registrar is Namecheap and the registrant is hidden by a privacy service.

Privacy protection is common and legal.

Still, it means visitors cannot easily see who is behind the site.

The Big Concern Is The Offer Model

The risky part is not only the domain name.

The risky part is the offer path.

The site says users must complete 4–5 offers before claiming a reward.

These “complete offers” systems often ask users to sign up for trials, install apps, answer surveys, share contact details, or agree to marketing messages.

Sometimes the reward becomes hard to claim because each step has rules.

Sometimes users spend time or money and still do not receive what they expected.

That is why the exact terms matter more than the front-page promise.

Before using the site, a visitor should read the reward terms, privacy policy, eligibility rules, and any payment or subscription terms connected to each offer.

It Does Not Look Like A Normal Food Website

The name “FoodieClaim” sounds like it might be about food deals, recipes, restaurants, or grocery savings.

But the actual page is mostly a reward funnel.

It does not appear to offer original food content, grocery price comparison, recipes, restaurant reviews, or a normal store catalog.

The food angle seems tied to Sam’s Club groceries and bulk items.

So a better description is this: foodieclaim.com appears to be a promotional reward-claim landing page using food and grocery language.

It is not a full food service website.

What A Careful User Should Do

Do not enter your main email address right away.

Use a separate email if you only want to test the site.

Do not enter banking details, card numbers, government ID numbers, or passwords.

Do not reuse your Sam’s Club password anywhere on this site.

Check whether the same reward is shown inside your official Sam’s Club account or on samsclub.com.

Read the terms before completing any third-party offer.

Watch for free trials that turn into paid subscriptions.

Take screenshots of the offer rules before starting.

Leave the site if the reward keeps moving farther away after each completed step.

My Overall View

Foodieclaim.com is not clearly proven to be a malware site based on the public checks I found.

But it also does not have the strong trust signals I would want for a $500 reward offer using a major brand name.

The site’s own page shows a simple reward process, but outside safety pages rate it in the low-to-mid trust range, around 51–52 out of 100.

The safest reading is this: foodieclaim.com may be a lead-generation or reward-offer site, but users should treat the $500 Sam’s Club-style reward claim with caution.

I would not treat it as an official Sam’s Club reward unless Sam’s Club confirms it directly through an official Sam’s Club page, email, app, or support channel.