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How to put the brakes on the latest DMV text scam

November 26, 2025
Erin Deleon // Shutterstock

How to put the brakes on the latest DMV text scam

First, it was phony , then , now scammers are at it again with an all-new, all-bad DMV text scam. The unfortunate popularity of this latest grift has caused states from New York, Florida, and Georgia, to Illinois, New Jersey, and beyond to issue official warnings.

This article from will help you heed those warnings and learn to swerve from the newest DMV scam crooks have cooked up. Because getting ripped off by the faux DMV might be the only thing worse than standing in line at the real DMV.

How the Latest DMV Text Scam Works

This all starts with a text from scam artists posing as the legit DMV (Department of Motor Vehicles, for those who haven鈥檛 had the pleasure). While the wording and minor details of the message may vary 鈥 because scammers are, unfortunately, creative sometimes 鈥 the content is typically consistent.

In most cases, the DMV text scam uses very official-sounding language to warn potential victims that they鈥檙e at risk of a serious penalty if they don鈥檛 pay a ticket fee or a related traffic fine to their respective state鈥檚 DMV, pronto. That penalty may be the revocation of their driver鈥檚 license, suspended vehicle registration, toll fees, additional charges, a hit to the victim鈥檚 credit score, or even legal .

Regardless, the intention is the same, and it鈥檚 a tactic consistently used by scammers since the dawn of their existence: motivate potential victims into action (i.e., giving scammers what they want) by making threats and leveraging an urgent sense of pressure.

Of course, the text includes a link that claims to lead to a payment portal for the victim鈥檚 state DMV. What this link really leads to, though, is created by the scam鈥檚 perpetrators. Disguised as a real DMV site, it may ask you to pay directly online or direct you to fill out a form asking you for all sorts of private information. In the first instance, you鈥檒l be paying the scammers and handing over the info associated with your payment method. In the second, you鈥檒l be giving them the information they need to potentially commit identity theft and steal your money.

Alternatively, following the link may just infect your device with malware, which can also mine valuable information from your device to commit financial fraud.

DMV Scam Red Flags

Oftentimes, DMV scam texts include all sorts of little touches to make them look official. In addition to a list of phony consequences, the text usually includes a due date and an enforcement date, and made-up administrative codes. Despite this sort of sneakiness, there are plenty of red flags that give this text away as a DMV scam.

Here鈥檚 the big one: State DMVs, according to the Federal Trade Commission, do not request information or money via text. So if you get a text asking for either of those from the DMV, that鈥檚 a DMV scam text for sure.

Additionally, while the link in the scam text might look legit, it often doesn鈥檛 allow the recipient to click the link directly from the text message, instead prompting them to respond with 鈥淵鈥 and then copy the link into their browser (because the link that you鈥檒l actually copy is slightly different from the official-looking link in the text).

What To Do If You Get a DMV Scam Text

First off, do not follow the link in any text you might even remotely suspect is a DMV scam text. You鈥檝e probably figured that part out already, but here are some other steps you can take:

  • Block the number immediately. If your device has a 鈥渞eport spam鈥 or 鈥渕ark as spam鈥 option, go ahead and do that, too.
  • If you鈥檙e at all worried that the actual state DMV might be trying to contact you, look up their real phone number and give them a call to make sure you don鈥檛 owe anything, and that they鈥檙e not actually trying to contact you.
  • Similarly, if you want to be extra sure you鈥檙e not dealing with the authentic DMV, stick that DMV scam text phone number into a tool.
  • To be a good Samaritan, you can copy and forward the text to the number 7726 (SPAM) or report the details at to help prevent others from getting scammed in the future.

FAQs About DMV Scam Texts

This latest shakedown is a variation of phishing 鈥 the age-old scam of 鈥渇ishing鈥 for your private information or money by posing as a legitimate company, person, or organization 鈥 known as 鈥,鈥 which is just phishing via text. And while phishing is well known at this point, the internet still has plenty of questions about 2025鈥檚 new DMV scam text racket.

Does the DMV ever send text messages?

While you might get automated reminders for appointments and the like if you willingly sign up for them, no DMV in the country sends demands for payment, violation warnings, or enforcement notices via text message.

Where is the DMV text scam?

Pretty much nationwide. As of late August 2025, reports have been confirmed in Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, Washington, Wisconsin, and beyond.

What happens if you respond to a scam text?

Basically, you open yourself up to getting scammed. Responding indicates to the scammer that they鈥檝e got a live one on the hook, a real person that might be willing to communicate with them on the other end. And once they鈥檝e got you, they鈥檒l phish for any piece of information or money they can get. Best to block and report on sight.

Think of it this way 鈥 engaging with the scammers on the other side takes you one step closer to the one place on earth that鈥檚 worse than the real DMV: the scam DMV.

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