An official website of the United States government
Here’s how you know
The .gov means it’s official.
Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.
The site is secure.
The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.
Make smart shopping decisions, know your rights, and solve problems when you shop or donate to charity.
View Shopping and Donating
View all Consumer Alerts
Get Consumer Alerts
Learn about getting and using credit, borrowing money, and managing debt.
View Credit, Loans, and Debt
View all Consumer Alerts
Get Consumer Alerts
What to know when you’re looking for a job or more education, or considering a money-making opportunity or investment.
View Jobs and Making Money
View all Consumer Alerts
Get Consumer Alerts
What to do about unwanted calls, emails, and text messages that can be annoying, might be illegal, and are probably scams.
View Unwanted Calls, Emails, and Texts
View all Consumer Alerts
Get Consumer Alerts
How to protect your personal information and privacy, stay safe online, and help your kids do the same.
View Identity Theft and Online Security
View all Consumer Alerts
Get Consumer Alerts
Have you ever gotten a text message about a package coming via the United States Postal Service? Maybe it confirmed your order, said a package is out for delivery, or said there’s a problem like unpaid postage, a missed delivery, or you need to update your shipping preferences. That text message will say to click a link to learn more or fix the problem. But there’s a good chance that text message that says it’s from USPS (or FedEx…or DHL…) is really from a scammer.
Scammers want you to click the link in their message. What happens next is the scam: the click takes you to a look-alike of a real website where they’ll tell you to enter personal or financial information. If you pay, that money — along with your credit card number, name, address, and anything else you entered — will go straight to the scammer.
To avoid this scam:
Check out these resources to help you weed out spam text messages, phishing emails, and unwanted calls. Spotted a scam? Tell the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
More
Más
