These days, your phone isn’t just buzzing with alerts, it’s buzzing with lies.
If you’ve received a text that says something like, ‘You’ve been pre-approved for a $40,000 loan, tap here!’ you’re not alone.
Loan scams are one of the fastest-growing forms of SMS fraud, and they’re hitting people when they’re most financially vulnerable.
According to a Federal Trade Commission (FTC) data spotlight published in April 2025, consumers reported $470 million in losses to text scams in 2024, more than five times the amount reported in 2020.
Let’s break down how these scams work, what they’re after, and how to protect yourself.
I’ll also show you a tool you can use to peek into real mortgage info on properties, which might surprise you.
The timing is no accident
Text-based loan scams are booming because scammers know we’re all a little stressed out financially.
Loan scams are one of the fastest-growing forms of SMS fraud, and they’re hitting people when they’re most financially vulnerable
Inflation, rising rent, medical debt, student loans and tariffs, they don’t care what’s causing the stress. They’re just looking for an opening.
A quick loan sounds like the perfect lifeline when bills are piling up.
These scam messages usually include:
● The promise of instant approval
● No credit check required
● Links to fake lender websites
● Pressure to ‘act fast’ before the offer expires
Some even claim to be from legitimate banks or fintech services, complete with logos and legitimate-sounding names like ‘Loan Support Team’ or ‘AutoLoan Desk.’
They look official. That’s the trap.
Smarter than ever and way more personal
In the past, scam texts were easy to spot: bad grammar, weird URLs, random dollar amounts. Today’s scammers use AI tools to craft convincing messages and even mimic real lenders’ websites down to the fine print.
Worse? Some of them are pulling your data from leaks or shady brokers, including your name, approximate income, city, and credit status, to make the message feel legitimate.
Example: Hi Sarah, based on your current credit profile, you’ve been pre-approved for up to $35,000. No fees, no wait. Tap to see your options.
The ‘tap’ leads to a fake website designed to steal your Social Security number, driver’s license, banking info, and more.
The real mortgage info is public and that matters
Here’s something a lot of people don’t know: if you go to Homes.com, you can scroll to the bottom of many property listings and see actual mortgage data, including what a homeowner paid, the loan amount, and sometimes even the lender.
Why does this matter?
Because scammers know it too. Public records are a goldmine for impersonation. If a crook knows you bought your home last year with a $450,000 loan from Rocket Mortgage, it’s easy for them to spin up a fake ‘refinance offer’ that looks convincingly real.
You get a message that says:
Hey, rates have dropped. We can cut your $450K Rocket loan to 5.2% APR. Tap to lock in your savings.
All of that info is out there. Combine it with a little stolen data, and the scam feels personal.
Warning signs your ‘loan offer’ is a scam
Here are the red flags I tell everyone to watch for:
● Unsolicited text or email with a ‘pre-approval’ you didn’t ask for
● No credit check required, real lenders always run one
● Too good to be true rates or approval amounts that don’t match your credit reality
● Pressure tactics like ‘offer expires in 1 hour’ or ‘must act today’
● Requests for sensitive info up front like your Social Security number, banking login, or even photos of your ID
Real lenders will never ask you to confirm your bank login via text. Period.
Here’s what I recommend:
● Don’t click links in unsolicited texts even if they use a real lender’s name.
● Verify the offer by visiting the official website yourself, not through the link.
● Use spam filters on your phone (iPhones and Androids both have them under Settings).
● Report scam texts to 7726 (that spells ‘SPAM’ on your phone). It helps carriers shut them down.
● Freeze your credit for free: Note, there are four credit bureaus now.
○ Freeze Equifax
○ Freeze Experian
○ Freeze TransUnion
○ Freeze Innovis
Financial stress makes people vulnerable. When you’re desperate, an easy loan feels like a lifeline, not a trap.
The scammers know that. That’s why they’re refining their language, copying real websites, and using data to make the message feel personal.
And when someone does fall for it, it’s not just a few bucks lost. It can lead to drained bank accounts, stolen identities, or worse, loans taken out in your name.
Loan text scams aren’t going away; they’re getting smarter. So we have to get smarter, too.
Stick with verified lenders, double-check every message, and if your gut says something feels off, don’t tap. No ‘instant approval’ is worth handing your identity over to a stranger with a burner phone.
