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📦 Amazon Scam Alert

Amazon Delivery Scam Texts 2026:
How to Spot, Stop & Report Them

Amazon delivery scam texts are one of the most common phishing attacks in 2026. They look real, feel urgent, and are designed to steal your card details or account login. Paste any suspicious Amazon text below for an instant verdict.

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The Most Common Amazon Scam Texts Right Now

Scammers send messages that look exactly like real Amazon alerts. The most common ones say things like "Your package is on hold. Click here to reschedule" or "Delivery failed. Update your address now."

These links lead to fake websites designed to steal your login credentials, credit card details, and personal information. The sites look identical to the real Amazon website.

📱 Real Example — Fake Amazon Delivery Scam
From: +1-555-0147

AMAZON: Your package #A847-2026 has been held at our facility due to incomplete delivery information. To reschedule delivery, update your details within 24 hours: amaz0n-delivery-update.com/reschedule
🚨 HIGH RISK — This is a scam
🚩 Fake domain — Amazon uses amazon.com only
🚩 "24 hours" urgency tactic
🚩 Random phone number — Amazon uses short codes
🚩 "amaz0n" uses zero instead of letter O

What to do: Delete the message. Check your orders directly at amazon.com or in the Amazon app.

7 Signs That Amazon Text is Fake

🔗
Link doesn't go to amazon.com
Real Amazon links only go to amazon.com. Watch for "amaz0n", "amazon-delivery.net", or any other variation.
Urgent deadline ("24 hours")
Creating panic is the #1 scam tactic. Real Amazon delivery issues don't expire in 24 hours.
📱
Comes from a regular phone number
Real Amazon texts come from short codes, not regular 10-digit phone numbers.
💳
Asks for payment or card info
Amazon will never ask for payment via a text message link. Always go directly to the app.
🔑
Asks you to log in via the link
If the link takes you to a login page, close it immediately. It's a fake page designed to steal your password.
📦
You weren't expecting a package
If you didn't order anything recently, any delivery notification is almost certainly a scam.
📧
Sender email isn't @amazon.com
Real Amazon emails come from @amazon.com addresses only. Check carefully — scammers use @amazon-support.net and similar fake domains.
✏️
Spelling errors or odd phrasing
Amazon proofs every communication carefully. Any typos or awkward sentences are red flags.

What to Do If You Got a Suspicious Amazon Message

Do NOT click any links. Instead, open the Amazon app or go directly to amazon.com in your browser and check your orders from there. If there's a real delivery issue, it will show in your account.

If you already clicked — change your Amazon password immediately, check your account for unauthorized orders, and contact your bank if you entered payment information.

Does Amazon ever contact you by text?
Yes — but only with short codes (not regular phone numbers), and never asking you to click a link to log in or make a payment. Always verify directly in the app.
I clicked the link — what now?
Change your Amazon password immediately. If you entered payment info, call your bank. Run a security scan on your device. Monitor your accounts for unauthorized activity.
How do I report a fake Amazon text?
Forward the text to 7726 (SPAM) to report it to your carrier. You can also report it to Amazon directly at amazon.com/reportascam and to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.

Check Other Types of Scams

Also check: USPS delivery scams · fake PayPal emails · latest scam alerts

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