HIGH delivery
Is “usps tracking text asking for address” a scam?
Yes — this is a known, dangerous scam.
A text impersonating USPS, FedEx, UPS, or DHL claims your package cannot be delivered without an updated address or a small fee. The link leads to a fake site that steals your address, phone, card number, and sometimes plants a phishing app.
How to tell
- ⚠ USPS does not send unsolicited texts asking for money to release a package
- ⚠ The link uses unofficial domains like 'usps-pkg.com', 'fedex-update.net', or random-looking shortlinks
- ⚠ Tiny fee amounts ($1.99 to $5) designed to seem too small to bother questioning
- ⚠ Pressure to act within hours or your package 'will be returned to sender'
What to do right now
- 1 Do not click. Delete the text
- 2 If you are expecting a package, go to the carrier's real app or type the official URL into your browser to check its status
- 3 If you already clicked and entered card information, call your bank to dispute charges and replace the card
- 4 Forward the text to 7726 (SPAM) to report to your carrier
- 5 Report to the FTC at https://reportfraud.ftc.gov and the FBI's IC3 at https://www.ic3.gov.
Full guidance, red flags, variants & official sources
USPS or FedEx text says your package is held up and needs $2.99 to release →