Keep getting texts about job offers? Don鈥檛 fall for this common scam
Keep getting texts about job offers? Don鈥檛 fall for this common scam
Scammers love to prey on hope, and with a in the U.S. as of August 2025, they鈥檝e got a lot of hopeful job seekers to pounce on. No matter the economic environment, though, job offer scams are a perennial favorite of sketchy grifters 鈥 the latest model just so happens to come in the form of a fake job text message, and it can seem rather convincing, too.
Got a text out of the blue about a potential job at your dream company? If it鈥檚 an opportunity that sounds too good to be true, that鈥檚 because it probably is. explains how to know for sure.
Key Takeaways:
- Text-based job offer scams are on the rise.
- The latest job offer scams pose as recruiters or dream companies offering cushy jobs.
- They鈥檙e actually out to get your valuable private information.
Job Text Scams: How They Work
The latest string of job offer scams has gotten so prevalent that the issued a warning to help keep job hunters from getting their hearts broken and their bank accounts drained. The most recent popular iteration of the scam is a fake job text message from a phony 鈥渞ecruiter鈥 or a dream job-worthy company. Here鈥檚 how it works:
- Victims get an unsolicited text, seemingly out of the blue.
- Said text claims to be from a job recruiting service, such as Indeed or ZipRecruiter, or from a popular company with dream job vibes (think or Apple) and often describes a cushy-sounding gig with a nice pay rate.
- The job description will be vague and suspiciously easy to fulfill. describes a common example seeking 鈥渞emote product testers鈥 who only need to work for an hour or two a day to earn up to $400 daily by 鈥渞eviewing new products or services online.鈥 , meanwhile, came across one that offered pay just for listening to songs on Spotify. Both are bogus.
- Once you apply, the scammers will let you know you鈥檝e been 鈥渉ired鈥 (spoiler: everyone gets the 鈥渉ired鈥), at which point they will ask for all sorts of sensitive private information (bank info, social security number, etc.).
- Alternatively, the link is just a phishing link, aimed at gathering your private information or installing malware onto your device.
What Do They Want?
Crooks aren鈥檛 sending out for fun. By and large, job offer scams are designed to obtain your valuable private information as a form of phishing. If you get lured in and respond to a job text scam, the scammer will most likely attempt to move you on to an 鈥渁pplication鈥 phase. Typically, this happens via a professional-looking online form, email, or an external chat app, like or . In order to 鈥渁pply,鈥 you鈥檒l be prompted to provide sensitive, private information, which the grifter can then use to commit identity theft, most likely in an attempt to access your finances.
In some versions of job offer scams, the scammer will even offer to give you a portion of your future paycheck upfront, but to do so, they鈥檒l need your bank account information. Of course, in the end, you鈥檒l be the one paying them, against your will. In either case, your best bet is to avoid responding, period 鈥 block and report job text scams on sight.
How to Know If a Job is a Scam
When it comes to fake job text messages, the usual giveaways still apply. Things like typos, fishy-looking links or email domains (look for slight misspellings of real company or brand names, like 鈥淚nedeed鈥 dot com instead of 鈥淚ndeed鈥 dot com), or 鈥渁ct now!鈥 pressure tactics should make you give a very stern side-eye.
But on a level more specific to these text-based job offer scams from 鈥渞ecruiters,鈥 keep your eyes peeled for these potential red flags:
- The job description sounds a little too easy, a little too well paid, or a little too good to be true.
- It鈥檚 a job you didn鈥檛 apply for or appears to be from a recruiter you haven鈥檛 used.
- The text is sent as part of a group chat, with multiple people gassing up the apparent company or job offer.
- The text directs you to external platforms like WhatsApp, iMessage, or WeChat.
- The texter has a . For instance, +91 is a message from India, while +63 is from the Philippines 鈥 both countries known for having high scam text activity.
- If an email address is given, the domain is a personal or free service, like 鈥淍鈥 or 鈥淍鈥 instead of an official company domain.
- The recruiter is one you鈥檝e never heard of, and a Google search for said 鈥渞ecruiter鈥 comes up dry or produces accounts of previous scams.
- The sender asks for any sort of private information before you have an interview.
- You鈥檙e immediately 鈥渉ired鈥 without any form of a legitimate interviewing process.
Frequently Asked Questions About Job Scam Texts
Just like a real job interview, the much phonier world of job text scams elicits a lot of questions, and reasonably so. Here are some of the most common queries people search for when it comes to job offer scams.
Is it legal for your employer to text you?
Yes, though some states have proposed laws that could limit employer texts outside of business hours. However, the keyword here is 鈥渆mployer,鈥 not random recruiters or job offers out of the ether.
Is it normal for jobs to text you?
While recruiting sites that you actually signed up for may send automated texts if you opted in to them, most legit employers do not send job offers via text 鈥 especially some of the bigger and shinier companies that job text scams like to name drop.
How do you report fake job offers?
When you block the number (and you should block the number), make sure to mark it as spam to help improve automatic spam detection for others across the board. You can also forward the text to 7726 (鈥淪PAM鈥) or file a report at .
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