The scam involves a text message purportedly from the DMV claiming that the recipient has unpaid traffic fines and that several penalties are possible.
🚨 What’s Going On: “DMV Final Notice” Text Scam
Scammers are sending alarming texts impersonating state DMVs, claiming you owe unpaid tolls or tickets, and threatening license suspension—often pushing you to click a link or reply immediately.
These texts usually come from random phone numbers (sometimes international) and direct you to non-official, misleading websites . They frequently mention codes like “15C-16.003” and include ominous deadlines.
✅ Real DMV Behavior vs. Scam
DMVs do NOT send text notices for payment demands or tolls—they primarily mail letters and might text appointment reminders, but never request money via SMS.
Multiple state DMVs (California, Virginia, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Michigan) have issued warnings:
“DMV will never send a text message to ask for personal or financial information.”
“Don’t click any links. Do not reply. Delete immediately.”
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💬 From Reddit & Community Reports
Reddit users confirm:
“This is a scam – the DMV will never send text message notices like this.”
“No state DMV sends out threatening messages like this. Safely ignore, report as spam and delete.”
🧠 How to Protect Yourself
Do not click on any link or reply to the message.
Delete or block the text immediately.
Report it:
Forward the text to 7726 (SPAM) to alert carriers.
Report to your state DMV or FTC (ReportFraud.ftc.gov).
Verify directly:
If unsure, check your DMV online account or call the official DMV number—never use links or numbers sent in the text.
Lock your device:
Keep your phone’s spam filter on and stay alert—it may alert you to “likely scam” texts.
🔍 Why They’re Effective—and Dangerous
The FBI warns these scams are evolving—using AI to make them more convincing and targeting summer travelers.
The FTC reports Americans lost $470 million to text scams in 2023 alone.
Common variations involve toll fees or ticket enforcement and push urgent responses.
✅ What to Do Right Now
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1️⃣ | Ignore/Delete the message |
| 2️⃣ | Block/Report via phone tools and forward to 7726 |
| 3️⃣ | Verify through official DMV channels, not via the text |
| 4️⃣ | Report to FTC if you think it might be phishing |
🧭 Bottom Line
Texts demanding DMV payments are almost always scams. Always verify through official sources, never click suspicious links, and report them to help protect others.
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