Smishing / text-message scam
Is the Sunpass text a scam?
The "Sunpass" text going around is a smishing (text-message phishing) scam. Legitimate tolling agencies bill the registered vehicle owner by mail or through your official account — they never text a link demanding immediate payment to avoid a fine.
A wave of texts claiming to be from Sunpass is circulating in 2026. They are smishing — phishing sent over SMS — built to make you panic and tap a link before you think. Here's exactly what the message looks like, how to spot it, and what to do if you already tapped.
What the Sunpass scam text looks like
Wording and amounts change, but the structure is always the same: urgency + a link + a request for money or details.
Red flags in the Sunpass text
- A tiny balance (a few dollars) plus a huge threatened late fee — classic toll-scam math.
- An urgent deadline ("within 12 hours", "final notice", "avoid suspension") designed to make you act before thinking.
- A link to a site that is not the company's real domain — often a look-alike with extra words or a strange ending (.com-style typos, .xyz, .top).
- A request for payment, card details, or a login from a text you did not expect.
What to do if you got the Sunpass text
- Don't tap the link. Opening it can load a fake Sunpass login page or trigger a malicious download.
- Verify independently: open the official Sunpass app or type the address yourself — never from the text.
- Report it: forward the text to 7726 (SPAM) in the US, then delete it.
- If you already tapped or entered details, change that password now and contact Sunpass and your bank.
- Run anything you're unsure about through Scam Doctor for a clear Stop / Verify / Continue verdict.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Sunpass text a scam?
If it arrived unexpectedly and contains a link asking you to pay, verify, or log in, treat it as a scam. Legitimate tolling agencies bill the registered vehicle owner by mail or through your official account — they never text a link demanding immediate payment to avoid a fine.
What happens if I clicked the link in the Sunpass text?
Don't enter any details. If you already did, change your Sunpass password immediately, contact your bank if you shared card or banking info, and watch for further suspicious activity. You can paste the message into Scam Doctor to confirm what it was.
How do I report the Sunpass scam text?
In the US, forward it to 7726 (which spells "SPAM") so your carrier can block the sender, then report it to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov and delete the message.
How can I check if a Sunpass text is real?
Don't trust the link. Open the official Sunpass app or website directly, or paste the message into Scam Doctor for an instant verdict in seconds.