Apple Approval Notice text message scam

[Apple Security Alert]


We have noticed that your Apple id was recently used at "APPLE STORE" for $143.95, paid by Apple Pay Pre Authorization. Also some suspicious sign in request and apple pay activation request detected. That looks like suspicious to us. In order to maintain the security and privacy of your account we have placed those request on hold. If NOT you? Please Call +1 850-85*-**** to talk to an Apple Representative. Failing may lead to auto debit and charge will not be reversed. Call +1 850-85*-**** immediately to cancel this charge.


Customer Support: +1 850-85*-****

Billing Support : Subscriptions and Billing - Apple Support


[Edited by Moderator]


iPhone 15, iOS 17

Posted on Aug 6, 2024 3:23 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 21, 2024 10:20 AM

What if, like a fool, I called the number provided. I disconnected before there was even an answer. How bad did I mess up?


I will be reporting the phishing text immediately of course.

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Sep 18, 2024 6:31 AM in response to KMP6276

KMP6276 wrote:
this needs to be stopped!!!

It's a case of whack-a-mole. You can report it to Apple using the mail address I provided in my earlier response but frankly even if Apple can stop one (and I don't know how they can do that with text messages), another one will pop up. We are living in an age where you have to be a smart consumer and this is the 21st century version of cons who have been around for centuries.

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Jan 8, 2025 8:45 AM in response to nottemare

nottemare wrote:

This is what I got. I called and he asked for my ID and first and last name and I hesitated, we got disconnected so he called me right back, from NJ…


The scammer was almost certainly not in New Jersey. Calling numbers are routinely faked.


Giving a scammer your Apple Account will get you more spam, and will get you more scams, and will get more and better-targeted phishing, but won’t compromise your security.


But giving a scammer your Apple Account password is a major problem, will compromise your security, and will lead to an exceedingly bad day.


If you gave out your password, change your Apple Account password NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW NOW.


If you gave out your password, and as was linked in IdrisSeabright’s response immediately above:


If you can’t change your password, you unfortunately may well have already lost control of that account, amd everything associated with it.



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Jan 16, 2025 7:54 AM in response to Smorris825

Smorris825 wrote:

I got this message today, I did call the number, but became very suspicious the person was not professional. did have me look under General then the Language & Region where under Region Format Example there were two charges dated August 19, 2025, in the amts of $12,345.67 and $4567.89. Not sure how they were able to do this, not sure if my phone is now compromised.

Settings>General>Language & Region>Format Example is NOT a charge. It's just showing you how things will look with the region settings you've chosen. It's there on every single iPhone.




Unless you gave the person on the phone information such as your Apple Account login and password or credit card information, you should be fine.

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Jan 11, 2025 10:13 AM in response to Educatorsu

Educatorsu wrote:

But mine which is the exact one posted here came via text message, not email.


With no disrespect intended, why would myriad spammers and myriad scammer restrict themselves to just one communications path to conduct their myriad scams, and not use every available means?


I’d also expect they copy what they suspect are working scams from other scammers too, whether it’s this one, the ever-popular “hello pervert” sextortion, or approximately 3.1415926 billion other variations.


This scamming is, after all, a large and highly automated business.

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Jan 20, 2025 9:42 AM in response to MHowl

MHowl wrote:

I believe this is a scam. I did not call but others say it is.


Some very few of many frauds: Recognize and avoid social engineering schemes including phishing messages, phony support calls, and other scams - Apple Support


Lots more scams: https://reddit.com/r/scams



Received text message:

“Apple Approval Notice

We have noticed that your Apple iCloud id


Word salad. It’s also called an “Apple Account”, formerly “Apple ID”.


The scammers haven’t caught up with the name change.


…was recently used at "APPLE STORE - CA" for $143.95, paid by Apple Pay Pre Authorization.


More word salad


Also some suspicious sign in request and apple pay activation request detected.


More word salad, typos and bad grammar and all.


That looks like suspicious to us.


Yeah, even more mis-grammatical word salad


In order to maintain the security and privacy of your account we have placed those request on hold. 


Wow, even more word salad.


If NOT you? talk to an Apple Representative.


Word salad.


When fraud is suspected, banks default to rejecting.


They’ll ask you to confirm your (blocked) purchase, not to block some suspected-fraudulent purchase.


Failing may lead to auto debit and charge will not be reversed.


Word salad, and also not how credit card billing and payment disputes work.


Call +1 805366**** immediately to cancel this charge.


Yeah, because Apple is likely to be posting a not-toll-free telephone number, and — if you searched for it — a telephone number that goes who-knows-where, but not to Apple.


Billing Department :  Subscriptions and Billing - Official Apple Support


Hahahhahah no.


Have a great day!”


Also nope.


If this text message were from Biff’s Big Y Market and Pancake Restaurant’s Department of Fraud Prevention, I’d expect grammar and phrasing errors. Biff’s never been good at the grammars. For messages from Apple, not so much.


Now… assuming that all the above details still might not convince some folks that this message is a scam, the next stop is to contact Apple Support directly, using a telephone number that is posted at the Apple website, and ask them. Anybody can answer a phone number, and lie about who they are, too.


PS: Calling telephone numbers and SMS sending numbers and sending email addresses can all be spoofed / faked / forged, too.


PPS: for even more, see the eight pages of replies posted here.


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Feb 10, 2025 1:06 PM in response to ColoradoBeginner

ColoradoBeginner wrote:

I HAVE NOT ORDERED ANY ITEM FROM THE APPLE STORE!


No need to shout. You've appended your question in a thread related to a common scam message (rather than starting your own question), so you're going to see replies related to that common scam message.


If you want to start your own thread for your own question, use the Ask the Community link in the top center right.


the activity is a scam!🤨


Yes. Most definitely. I wish that detail were more widely appreciated, too.


I would like to obtain a 19th generation iPad MANUAL! Any suggestions?


No iPad 19th generation exists.


Here are the iPad 9th generation manuals:


iPad (9th generation) Manuals and Downloads - Apple Support


Here is the user guide for iPadOS 18, for the current version of iPadOS:


iPad User Guide - Apple Support


If you have some other iPad generation, please post that.

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Dec 19, 2024 7:42 AM in response to Emmalee00

Emmalee00 wrote:

Today is December 19th and I just got this text!!! They are still at it! I’m so glad that I googled this before responding! It seemed pretty shady!

And they will still be "at it" for as long as people have text messaging. And then they'll move on to whatever comes next. Delete and move on.

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Dec 20, 2024 9:47 AM in response to christiane221

christiane221 wrote:

I got this message today


joethinkley wrote:



got the same today 12/20/2024


It's SPAM! We all get spam.........every day. Don't take this the wrong way, but no one here is surprised you got spam and no one really cares. It's a fact of life, like death and taxes.

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Jan 27, 2025 8:52 AM in response to FloGa1960

FloGa1960 wrote:

I just received this text January 25, 2025 supposedly from Apple


Have y’all had conversations about text scams with your friends and relatives?


With those that others that might fall for these?


Because they’re getting these scam texts, too.


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Feb 13, 2025 8:25 AM in response to SilentCare

SilentCare wrote:

Received this just now… searched and found your similar post. Hopefully Apple can use the links to better service and protect their services. Your financial institutions also strive to protect their customers from fraud.



It’s 2025.


We get lied to.


We get scams.


We get propaganda.


We get social media algorithms pushing some opinions and muting others, too.


And Apple, thankfully, are not the police.


Got complaints about the current state of the world, check with your legislative representatives.


Not that some of the proposed legislative solutions won’t be far worse than the problems, of course.

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Mar 3, 2025 2:26 PM in response to letour111

letour111 wrote:

Just received a similar phishing text message today:
The sender number was +63 953 301 ****
Country code 63 is the Philippines.

The messages always seem to contain similar content.
I suspect the scammers are the same or they cut and paste the same phishing messages.
Reported it to reportphishing@apple.com

The scammers are THOUSANDS of low-paid slave laborers in Myanmar and other countries. They send MILLIONS of these and other scam messages a day through bots running on compromised servers around the world.


While reporting them is satisfying, it won’t stop them; it is too profitable, earning the “masters” of these scams several billion dollars a year.

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Mar 4, 2025 7:09 AM in response to iLuvApples2

iLuvApples2 wrote:

Just got this same text and it’s still happening sent by fra****************41@gmail.com
spammed and reported!

Posting your email in an open forum will likely increase the amount of spam you get. It could also result in more targeted and nefarious emails.

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Apple Approval Notice text message scam

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