Job Text Scam(2026 Alert)
How it works, what to do, and real examples
Last updated: April 2026 based on active scam data from Nomorobo
Is the job text message real?
Usually not. These scams use fake job offers sent through text messages to steal personal information, money, or access to financial accounts.
Scammers often impersonate recruiters, HR departments, or well known companies.
Common signs of this scam:
- Unexpected text offering remote work
- High pay for little experience
- Requests to continue conversation on WhatsApp or Telegram
- Promises of quick hiring with no interview process

Example job scam text
Real Job Scam Text (Captured by Nomorobo)
What to notice in this message:
- Generic greeting
- Unrealistic compensation
- Urgent invitation to continue chatting elsewhere
Example message:
“Hello! We reviewed your resume and have a remote job opportunity paying up to $500/day. Reply YES for details.”
How this scam works
Job scams usually follow a predictable process:
-
Mass text distribution
Scammers send thousands of unsolicited messages -
Exciting opportunity
They promise remote work and high earnings -
Off-platform communication
Victims are moved to WhatsApp, Telegram, or Signal
Fraud or theft
Victims may be asked for personal information, upfront payments, or banking access
How to know it’s a scam
Use this checklist:
- You did not apply for the position
- The salary sounds unrealistic
- The recruiter avoids professional communication channels
- You are pressured to act quickly
- The company information is vague or unverifiable
What happens if you respond?
If you engage with the scammer:
- Your personal information may be stolen
- You could be asked to pay fake onboarding fees
- Your banking details may be compromised
- You may become a target for additional scams
Some victims are also tricked into fake check scams or cryptocurrency “work” schemes.
What to do right now
If you receive a suspicious job text:
- Do not respond
- Do not click links
- Do not share personal or financial information
- Verify the company independently
- Report the message as spam
- Block the sender
- Use text protection tools like Nomorobo
Seen on national TV
Nomorobo’s Matt Mizenko explains spam, scams and fraud
Job scams have exploded alongside remote work trends and are increasingly targeting younger workers and job seekers.
Key takeaway:
Scammers exploit financial stress and urgency by offering unrealistic opportunities with minimal verification.
What Nomorobo is seeing (real data)
Nomorobo’s monitoring systems show:
- Sharp increases in fake remote work text scams
- Frequent use of WhatsApp and Telegram for follow-up conversations
- Increasing overlap with crypto and payment fraud schemes
Trend:
Scammers are shifting aggressively toward SMS-based attacks because text messages have higher engagement rates than robocalls.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related scams
- Bitcoin ATM scam
- Amazon fraud call scam
- Bank of America impersonation scam
- Auto warranty scam calls

