That 'Pending Traffic Challan' SMS Is a Trap: How to Check a Real e-Challan

A text about a pending traffic fine with a payment link is a common India scam. How to verify a real challan at echallan.parivahan.gov.in and avoid the APK trap.
Quick answer: Do not pay a traffic fine from a link in an SMS. Check whether a challan is real yourself by entering your vehicle number at the official portal echallan.parivahan.gov.in or in the mParivahan app. Genuine government sites end in .gov.in. Fake challan texts use look-alike links and often push you to install an app (APK) that steals your money.
A text saying you have a pending traffic challan, with a link to "pay now before penalty," is one of India's most common scams. The link leads to a page that copies the transport department, or to an app that quietly drains your account. The fix is simple: never trust the link, always check the fine at the source.
How to tell a fake challan text
- The link is not a .gov.in address. Real challans are on echallan.parivahan.gov.in or your state transport portal. Scam links use odd domains that only look official.
- It pressures you to act now with a penalty deadline, so you click before thinking.
- It asks you to install an app or APK to pay or "view" the challan. No genuine challan needs this. An installed APK can read your OTPs and empty your account.
- The vehicle or challan details are vague or wrong. Scam texts are sent in bulk and often do not match your vehicle.
What to do instead
- Check at the source. Go to echallan.parivahan.gov.in (or your state's transport portal, or the mParivahan app, downloaded only from the official Google Play or App Store listing by NIC) and enter your vehicle number to see any real challan.
- Pay only on the official portal. If a challan is genuine, pay it there, not through any link you were sent.
- Do not install anything a challan message tells you to, and never enter card details or OTPs on a page you reached from an SMS.
- Report the financial fraud. If you clicked, paid, or installed an app, call 1930 and file at cybercrime.gov.in immediately. This is the route that can freeze the money.
- Flag the sender separately. Report the fraudulent SMS or call to your telecom provider through the Chakshu facility at sancharsaathi.gov.in/sfc. Chakshu only flags the communication; it does not process financial-fraud complaints, so it does not replace your 1930 report.
- If you installed an APK, put the phone in airplane mode, uninstall the app, and contact your bank to secure your accounts.
Frequently asked questions
How do I check if a traffic challan is real? Enter your vehicle number yourself at echallan.parivahan.gov.in, your state transport portal, or the mParivahan app. Do not use any link from an SMS.
What makes the fake ones dangerous? They send you to a copycat payment page or get you to install an APK that can read your OTPs and drain your bank account.
I already clicked and paid. What now? Call 1930 and file at cybercrime.gov.in right away, and tell your bank to freeze the card or account.
How do I know a site is official? Genuine transport and challan sites end in .gov.in. Treat anything else as suspect.
Where do I report the sender? Report the fraudulent SMS or call through the Chakshu facility at sancharsaathi.gov.in/sfc. If you lost money, that is a separate step: report the fraud to 1930 and cybercrime.gov.in, because Chakshu only flags the communication and cannot handle financial complaints.
Related: the "unpaid toll" smishing wave and how to report cybercrime in India.
If you clicked or paid, you are not alone. See our cybercrime help hub for step-by-step reporting and recovery guides.