A caller claims to be from your electric, gas, or water company. Your account is past due. A technician is on the way to disconnect service. Pay $187 in the next 30 minutes using a prepaid card or gift card, and the disconnection will be cancelled. Your utility company will never make this call. No utility company accepts gift cards. This is a scam — every time.
The utility shutoff scam impersonates electric, gas, water, or internet service providers to manufacture an urgent threat — immediate service disconnection — that pressures victims into making instant payment through untraceable methods. It is a specialized application of the gift card demand scam combined with a time-pressure tactic uniquely effective against both residential customers and small businesses.
The threat is specifically calibrated to the season. In summer heat waves, losing air conditioning is a genuine health risk — particularly for elderly customers. In winter, losing heat is potentially life-threatening. Scammers time their campaigns to periods when the consequence of disconnection is most viscerally frightening, knowing that fear of genuine physical discomfort produces faster compliance than financial threats alone.
The Edison Electric Institute, the American Gas Association, and consumer protection agencies in every US state have issued warnings about this scam, and major utilities maintain dedicated fraud hotlines to help customers verify whether a contact was legitimate. Despite high awareness among utility providers and regulators, the scam continues to generate substantial losses — particularly against small businesses where a single employee may be authorized to make payments and insufficiently trained to recognize fraud.
A call arrives showing the name and number of your actual utility company — caller ID spoofing makes this trivially achievable. A live agent or sophisticated robocall identifies your account by name, mentions a past-due balance (often a plausible amount like $187 or $243), and states that a service technician is dispatched to disconnect within 30 to 60 minutes unless immediate payment is received. The use of your actual utility company’s name and a realistic balance amount creates immediate credibility.
Payment must be made immediately — by prepaid debit card, gift card (Google Play, iTunes, Walmart), or a payment app. The caller stays on the line while you purchase the card, instructs you to call a specific number after purchasing, and asks you to read the card number and PIN aloud. Some operations direct victims to a payment kiosk or ATM that converts cash to cryptocurrency. None of these payment methods are used by legitimate utility companies for any purpose.
Some operations add a second layer: a fake “technician” arrives at the business or home shortly after the call, claiming to be there to disconnect service. This in-person element dramatically increases the scam’s credibility. The “technician” wears a uniform, carries tools, and asks to be let in to inspect the meter. They collect payment directly or direct the victim to the phone-based payment scam while standing on the premises. Never let anyone into your home or business based on a cold call — verify all utility visits independently.
Small businesses — restaurants, salons, retail stores — are targeted specifically during busy periods: lunch service, Saturday afternoon, holiday shopping season. The call arrives when the owner or manager is occupied, a junior staff member answers, and the threat of losing power during peak business hours creates maximum urgency. The staff member, lacking authority to authorize payment but terrified of the consequence, may comply without consulting ownership.
Hang up. Find your utility company’s official phone number on your most recent paper bill — not from the caller, not from a Google search that might surface a spoofed result, but from the printed bill you already have. Call that number and ask whether there is a genuine past-due balance on your account. Your real utility will confirm any balance instantly and accept payment through standard methods. If there is no balance, the call was fraudulent. This one step takes three minutes and defeats the scam completely regardless of how urgent or convincing the original call was.
The utility shutoff scam’s effectiveness against small businesses depends entirely on reaching an employee who is not trained to recognize it and who feels personally responsible for keeping the business running. A single brief training session — “our utility company will never demand gift card payment, call the owner before paying anyone who calls claiming to be from the power company” — eliminates the operational window the scam requires.
No utility payment should be authorized by phone to an inbound caller under any circumstances. All utility bill payments go through the standard billing process, verified against the paper bill, and paid through the utility’s official portal or by check. This policy, communicated to all staff with payment access, removes the individual judgment call that scammers exploit.
Post the official phone numbers for your electric, gas, water, and internet provider visibly near the phone or register — sourced from your most recent paper bills. Any staff member who receives a utility shutoff call can immediately verify by calling the posted number rather than trying to recall or search for it while under pressure. Friction in the verification step is what scammers exploit — removing that friction defeats the scam.
Fraudulent utility calls are targeted using consumer data profiles that identify your address, provider, and household size. The more personal data circulating about you publicly, the more convincing the approach. Identity theft protection services that monitor your data exposure can alert you when your information is being traded — before it’s used against you.