Quick answer
Check if an R700-grant page is real by treating the amount as unconfirmed first, checking the route and the source carefully, and not trusting the claim just because the number looks specific.
What this means
An amount page can look persuasive when it uses a precise number and a grant-like label. The safer question is whether the page clearly belongs to an official route or only imitates official language.
Why this matters
If the page is only a claim, users may waste time, share details in the wrong place, or build expectations around something that is not officially supported.
What you can do next
- Treat the R700 claim as unconfirmed first.
- Check whether the page points to a real official route.
- Avoid trusting copied application or beneficiary claims.
- Compare the page with safe amount-reading habits.
- Use GrantCare if you need help deciding whether the page is guidance, rumour, or something riskier.
Specificity is not proof
The page feels trustworthy because the claim sounds exact. That is exactly why users need to pause and check the route more carefully than they otherwise might.
Important things to remember
GrantCare does not endorse claimed grants without official confirmation. It helps users assess the safety of what they found.
How GrantCare can help
GrantCare can help you compare the page with official-route guidance, amount-rumour pages, and safe update-checking habits before you trust it.
Related help
Frequently asked questions
Why is the R700 page easy to trust too quickly?
Because a precise amount can sound more official than it really is.
What should I check besides the amount?
Check the route, the source, and whether the page clearly belongs to an official process.
Should I enter details just to test it?
No. Confirm the route first.
