You receive a text message: "Notice: Unpaid toll or speed camera violation. Outstanding balance of $14.75. Failure to pay by [date] will result in license suspension. Pay at: [link]." This is smishing — SMS phishing — and it's one of the fastest-growing fraud methods targeting drivers.

How the Scam Works

Criminals send mass text messages impersonating government agencies like the DMV, toll authorities (E-ZPass, SunPass, FasTrak), or municipal parking systems. The small dollar amounts ($5–$50) are deliberately designed to seem legitimate and low-risk enough that victims pay without questioning them.

The link leads to a convincing fake website that harvests your credit card or payment details. Sometimes the site also installs malware.

Red Flags

  • Unsolicited text about a fine or toll — legitimate agencies typically use mail for official notices.
  • Urgent deadline with threat of license suspension.
  • Link that doesn't match the official government agency domain.
  • Generic sender number (not a recognizable short code).
  • Grammar errors or slightly off language.

What to Do

  1. Do not click the link in the text message.
  2. If you want to verify, go directly to your local DMV or toll agency's official website (type it yourself — don't use the link).
  3. Report to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov.
  4. Forward the text to 7726 (SPAM) to report it to your carrier.
  5. Block the sender.

Sources: FTC; FBI; NCSC (National Cyber Security Centre).