Tea & Receipts

Fake job scams targeting DFW: The warning signs and how to verify real opportunities

Job scams are spiking in DFW as the market tightens. The FTC reported $508 million lost to job scams nationally in 2023, up 116% from 2020.

Red flags:

  1. Unsolicited job offers via text or DM. Real companies don't text you out of the blue with $80/hour data entry jobs.
  2. "Pay for training" or buy equipment. You should never pay to start a job.
  3. Interview via Telegram or WhatsApp only. Real companies use Teams, Zoom, or phone.
  4. Check before direct deposit setup. Scammers collect banking info this way.
  5. Overpayment scam. They "accidentally" send you $5,000 for equipment, then ask you to send back $3,000. The original check bounces.

How to verify a real job offer:

  1. Search the company on the Texas SOS business search (sos.state.tx.us)
  2. Find the company's real website and call their main number to verify the position
  3. Check LinkedIn for the recruiter — real profile, real connections, real history
  4. Verify the job is listed on the company's actual career page
  5. Search "[company name] job scam" to see if others have reported it

DFW-specific scams circulating:

  • Fake warehouse jobs in DFW airport area
  • "Amazon flex" clones asking for deposits
  • Fake remote work opportunities from "companies" with addresses in far Denton County strip malls

Report to:

  • FTC: reportfraud.ftc.gov
  • Texas Workforce Commission: twc.texas.gov
  • FBI IC3: ic3.gov (if you lost money)

RECEIPTS REQUIRED: If reporting a job scam, include the company name, job title, how they contacted you, and what they asked for. Screenshots help others avoid the same trap.

Sources:

  • FTC — job scam data (2023 Consumer Sentinel)
  • Texas Workforce Commission — fraud reporting
  • FBI IC3 — internet crime complaints
  • Texas SOS — business verification

If you never applied, the job isn't real.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 3:54 PM

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