This DMV Text Is the Latest Phishing Scam

Your license probably isn't actually at risk.

May 29, 2025 - 15:30
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This DMV Text Is the Latest Phishing Scam

The newest text scam making the rounds is a message that (poorly) impersonates your state DMV with a threat to rescind your license unless you pay outstanding fees. NPR reports that departments of motor vehicles in New York, Florida, and California have alerted residents to the scam, but it has been spotted in other places too (including Utah, where I live).

How the DMV text scam works

This scam purports to be from the DMV or transportation department in your state and warns of unpaid fees for traffic violations or tolls. The message directs recipients to a link to pay these supposed penalties or risk losing their license (or "driving privileges") or face legal action. It also references a state statute that may actually be legitimate (albeit unrelated to the warning), but that doesn't mean the text itself is.

The DMV scam currently circulating is similar to the unpaid tolls scam and the unpaid parking fee scam, both of which are examples of smishing, or SMS phishing. This type of attack relies on text messages to try to convince targets to click malicious links and disclose personal or financial information or download malware to their device in the process. Scammers engaging in smishing often attempt to impersonate legitimate institutions, such as banks and government agencies.

According to data from Robokiller, Americans received 19.2 billion spam texts, of which smishing is an example, in April 2025. That's an average of 63 messages per person.

Text scam red flags to watch for

The DMV scam may seem obvious, but bad actors hope that some recipients will be swayed by an official-looking text that threatens real-life consequences and act without investigating further. That's why you should be wary of any message, text or otherwise, that demands urgent action or invokes an emotional response.

Once you read more carefully, you'll notice additional red flags. The sender may be an email address or non-local (even international) phone number— official texts from government agencies typically come from five-digit numbers. The name of the department may be incorrect, such as the Florida State Department of Motor Vehicles (fake) instead of Florida Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (real). The URL to pay the supposed fine is not an official state website (https://utah[dot]gov-etcwirs[dot]cc, for example), and it may not be clickable, so it skirts your device's security features. And, of course, there may be minor spelling and grammar errors and odd formatting.