Fraudsters target motorists with fake road tax text messages and emails

Published 30 January 2019

Fraudsters are targeting drivers with fake road tax messages in an attempt to obtain personal information and banking details.

Claiming to be from the DVLA (Driver & Vehicle Licensing Agency) and featuring official logos, the scam texts and emails inform the motorist that their road tax VED payment has failed.

The message instructs the driver to click a link to complete a new payment, which redirects to a third party website where the user is asked to fill in a form and provide details of their bank account.

In one message a driver is told: 'Your latest vehicle tax payment failed. It appears that some of the billing details associated with you might have experienced or otherwise changed.

'Our system will automatically retry the billing process once your billing details have been updated…in order to continue to the updated page, please use the following link.'

Many of the fake road tax emails and text messages include a warning that the recipient will be fined up to £1000 or have their details passed to a debt collection agency if they do not comply with the payment request.

In a statement, the DVLA said it would never send a text message to inform a driver of a failed payment. The DVLA is urging all motorists to delete the messages and contact them if they have any concerns about a payments or their vehicle tax.  

Comments

Fessel    on 4 February 2019

MotorTax over here in Ireland has a warning up on their site about the same thing.

Roy Fuller    on 4 February 2019

I received a similar scam email in december claiming that my television license payment had failed and offering me a link to set up payment. I checked the government site and established that everything was OK. It appears that government Web sites are being hacked now.

NEIL SCARLETT    on 4 February 2019

Well bearing in mind the current the state of our roads, car tax, road fund licence or whatever it is called now is a fraud in itself.

Edited by NEIL SCARLETT on 04/02/2019 at 16:14

Andrew Greening    on 5 February 2019

Any text/e-mail that comes on your phone stating you owe money is to me is a scam, so disregard it and clear it off. I've had all of these plus phone calls threatening to cut my internet connection- My reply ?' Go ahead pal' then the phone goes down on the receiver.
Still got my internet access though.
People don't be duped, get real these scammers rely on you being stupid enough to fall for it.

Add a comment

 

Value my car

Save £75 on Warranty using code HJ75

with MotorEasy

Get a warranty quote

Save 12% on GAP Insurance

Use HJ21 to save on an ALA policy

See offer