TV Licence Scam Letter UK: Spot a Fake Demand
Scammers are sending fake TV Licensing demand letters to UK homes. Here's how to tell if yours is real—and what to do if you've already paid.
What a fake TV Licence letter looks like
A TV Licence scam letter imitates official TV Licensing correspondence, demanding payment or personal details, often with a threat of a fine or prosecution for not having a licence. An example of the style is: FINAL NOTICE: Our records show no valid TV Licence at this address. Pay the £180 fee within 7 days or face prosecution and a fine of up to £1,000.
Genuine TV Licensing correspondence follows a specific, verifiable process, and you can always check your licence status directly rather than relying on a letter's claims. This guide shows the warning signs, how to check safely, and what to do if you are unsure.
Why these letters are convincing
Official-looking letterhead, reference numbers, and legal-sounding threats of prosecution create genuine alarm, and the £1,000 maximum fine for watching TV without a licence is a real figure that makes the threat feel credible. Pressure to pay within a short deadline pushes people to act without checking.
The fact that protects you: you can check and manage your TV Licence directly through tvlicensing.co.uk at any time, and a genuine payment or enforcement issue can always be verified there rather than through the letter alone.
Signs a TV Licence letter is a scam
- It demands immediate payment with a very short deadline and a prosecution threat.
- It asks you to pay by an unusual method, such as a bank transfer to a personal account or gift cards.
- The reference number or format does not match a genuine TV Licensing letter you may have seen before.
- It asks for full bank details or personal information beyond what a real payment would need.
- The letter arrived despite you already holding a valid licence.
- Contact details differ from those published on tvlicensing.co.uk.
How the scam works
First, a letter demands payment and threatens prosecution or a fine. Second, urgency and the threat of legal action push you to pay quickly without checking. Third, you pay by an untraceable method to an account that has nothing to do with TV Licensing. Fourth, the payment is gone, and your genuine licence status is unaffected either way.
Checking your licence status directly at tvlicensing.co.uk, rather than relying on the letter, breaks the chain.
How to check a TV Licence letter safely
Do not pay based on the letter alone.
- Check your licence status directly at tvlicensing.co.uk or by calling TV Licensing using contact details from their official website.
- Never pay by bank transfer to a personal account or by gift cards for a TV licence.
- Be suspicious of any letter demanding payment within an unusually short deadline.
- If you already hold a valid licence, treat an unexpected demand letter as highly suspicious.
If you are unsure whether a linked page is genuine, our guide on Is This Website a Scam? A Practical Checklist Before You Buy helps, and our TV Licensing Scam Text UK: Spot a Fake Licence SMS guide covers the same scam by text message.
If you have already paid or shared details
If you paid by card, contact your bank or card issuer using the number on your card and ask about disputing the payment or a chargeback. If you sent money by UK bank transfer on or after 7 October 2024, mandatory APP fraud reimbursement rules may apply to Faster Payments and CHAPS transfers. The PSR rules include a 13-month claim window, a maximum claim amount of £85,000, possible exclusions, and a possible excess of up to £100. Report it to your bank as soon as possible.
Check your genuine TV Licence status at tvlicensing.co.uk regardless of what has already happened. If you shared personal information, consider Cifas Protective Registration at cifas.org.uk and monitor your credit reports with Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. Keep the letter as evidence.
How to report a TV Licence scam letter (UK)
You can report the letter to TV Licensing through the contact details on tvlicensing.co.uk. If a similar scam reached you by email, forward it to the NCSC at report@phishing.gov.uk; if by text, forward it to 7726.
If you lost money or shared sensitive information, report it to Report Fraud at reportfraud.police.uk or on 0300 123 2040 if you are in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland. In Scotland, report to Police Scotland on 101. Keep the letter and any envelope as evidence.
Frequently asked questions
Is every TV Licence enforcement letter fake?
No, but always verify your licence status directly at tvlicensing.co.uk rather than relying on a letter's claims, especially if it demands quick payment by an unusual method or you already hold a valid licence.
A letter threatens prosecution within 7 days — should I panic and pay?
No. Check your licence status directly at tvlicensing.co.uk first. A genuine issue can be resolved there; a scam letter relies on panic and a short deadline to stop you checking.
What payment methods should make me suspicious?
A demand to pay by bank transfer to a personal account, gift cards, or another untraceable method is a strong scam sign. Genuine TV Licensing payments go through their official channels.
I've paid a fake TV licence demand — can I get my money back?
Possibly. If you paid by card, ask your bank about a chargeback. Eligible UK transfers since 7 October 2024 may fall under APP reimbursement rules, subject to limits and exclusions. Check your genuine licence status regardless.
How do I report a fake TV Licence letter?
Report it to TV Licensing through tvlicensing.co.uk. If you lost money or shared details, report it to Report Fraud in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland, or to Police Scotland on 101 in Scotland.