TNT.com is the website of TNT Express, a global courier that's been around for decades. The domain itself is rock-solid: 29 years old, owned by a known corporate entity, with a clean security history and no blacklist flags. On paper, this is exactly what a legitimate logistics company's site should look like.
But here's the problem: when you try to visit tnt.com today, your browser will throw a security warning because the SSL certificate doesn't match the domain. That means any data you send — like tracking numbers, login credentials, or payment details — could be intercepted. For a site that asks you to log in (myTNT), this is a showstopper.
Is tnt.com a scam? No — the company is real and the domain history proves it. But is it safe to use right now? No. The broken certificate makes it a risk until the technical team fixes the configuration. If you need to access TNT Express services, try going through their parent company FedEx's site instead. This is a case where a legitimate business dropped the ball on basic security maintenance, and you should treat the site as unsafe until it's properly secured.