0453 829 384 - 0453829384: Prize Scam SMS Reports

4-min Read3 Reports

  • Scam

0453 829 384 (0453829384): Contributors report late-night SMS scams claiming they've won a prize and requesting they click a suspicious link.

Prize Scam SMS Reports for 0453 829 384

Two contributors have reported receiving scam text messages from 0453 829 384 (also written as 0453829384) within minutes of each other. Both messages claim the recipient is a "1000th client" winner entitled to an amazing prize, with urgent instructions to claim it immediately by clicking a link.

The identical message text across both reports strongly suggests this is an automated SMS campaign. Contributors flagged the obvious red flags: the generic greeting, poor personalisation despite supposedly knowing their name, and the suspicious shortened URL (rhdec.biz/gzcrd) designed to obscure the actual destination.

What These SMS Messages from 0453 829 384 Contain

Both contributors received the same message: "Winner revealed: We're excited to celebrate our 1000th client, [name], by offering you this amazing present! Claim it now: rhdec.biz/gzcrd."

The link rhdec.biz/gzcrd is the critical red flag. Clicking it would likely lead to a phishing page harvesting personal information, payment details, or device credentials. The urgency in "Claim it now" combined with the late-night timing is a classic scam pressure tactic - designed to bypass rational thinking when recipients are drowsy or distracted.

Timing and Delivery Patterns

Both SMS messages arrived at 9:39 PM and 9:40 PM on a Thursday evening. This late-night timing is deliberate. As one contributor noted, legitimate prize notifications arrive during business hours through official channels, not via obscure text messages at night. The near-simultaneous arrival suggests 0453829384 was used for bulk SMS distribution, potentially reaching hundreds or thousands of Australians in a single campaign.

What to Do If You Receive an SMS from 0453 829 384

If 0453 829 384 texts you:

  • Do not: Click the link, reply to the message, or share any personal information
  • Do not: Call the number or attempt to engage with the sender
  • Do: Delete the message immediately
  • Do: Block the number in your phone settings to prevent further contact
  • Do: Report the SMS as spam and scam using your phone's built-in options
  • Do: Forward the message to 0429 999 888 (ACMA's spam reporting number) if your carrier supports SMS forwarding to short codes

Do not assume you're on a "winner's list" for anything you didn't enter. Legitimate competitions notify winners through official channels with verifiable contact details, not anonymous text messages with suspicious links.

How to Report 0453 829 384

If you've received this scam SMS from 0453 829 384 (0453829384), report it to Australian authorities and help protect others:

  • Report to ACMA (Australian Communications and Media Authority): Forward the SMS to 0429 999 888 or visit acma.gov.au to file a complaint
  • Report to Scamwatch: Visit scamwatch.gov.au and report the SMS and the suspicious link rhdec.biz/gzcrd
  • Report to ReportCyber: If you clicked the link or suspect your device was compromised, report the malicious website to cyber.gov.au
  • Block the number: Add 0453 829 384 to your phone's blocklist to prevent future contact
  • Contribute to Reverseau: Share your experience on Reverseau to help other Australians identify this scam

Why This Scam Works (and How to Protect Yourself)

Prize scams targeting via SMS rely on several psychological tricks. The vague "1000th client" claim works because it's non-specific - you can't easily verify whether you're genuinely a client. The shortened URL hides where the link actually leads. And the late-night timing exploits reduced vigilance.

To protect yourself from similar scams from 0453829384 and other numbers:

  • Never click links in unsolicited SMS messages, regardless of the offer
  • Verify any prize claim directly with the company's official website or phone number (found independently, not from the message)
  • Remember: you cannot win a prize you didn't enter
  • Enable SMS spam filtering on your device (most modern phones have this built-in)
  • Be suspicious of any message requiring immediate action

Help others by sharing your experience with 0453 829 384!

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Ratings Distribution

1.0 out of 5
5 Stars 0%
4 Stars 0%
3 Stars 0%
2 Stars 0%
1 Star 100%

What Our Users Reviewed

K
Karlsen

Thought “who sends a message at 10 pm on a week night”

The only thing I thought was an emergency until I read the message.

A scammer had sent me a message:

_________________________

Winner revealed: We're excited to celebrate our 1000th client, xxx, by offering you this amazing present! Claim it now: rhdec.biz/gzcrd.

K
Kapp

Got woken up at 9;40 pm by a scammer sending a text. Allegedly I am a winner 🙄

Obviously it is a scam as if I legitimately was a winner, they would have notified me during business hours, not via a dodgy message late at night:

Winner revealed: We're excited to celebrate our 1000th client, ______, by offering you this amazing present! Claim it now: rhdec.biz/gzcrd.

A
Albers

🚨 SCAM WARNING ‼️

It is 9:39 PM on a Thursday night and I just received a scam SMS.

I don’t subscribe to anything via this number, nor use it when filling in forms, so can only assume this to be a scam.

If I was the “1000th client”, you would at think they would personalise this with my (correct) name.

Here’s the message:

Winner revealed: We're excited to celebrate our 1000th client, xxxxxx, by offering you this amazing present! Claim it now: rhdec.biz/gzcrd.


Help others by sharing your experience with 0453 829 384!

WRITE A REVIEW

Frequently Asked Questions

I clicked the link in the SMS from 0453 829 384 - what should I do?

Act quickly if you clicked the rhdec.biz/gzcrd link. Change your passwords (especially banking and email) from a secure device, monitor your accounts for suspicious activity, and consider contacting your bank to flag potential fraud. If you entered personal details on any page after clicking, report the malicious website to ReportCyber at cyber.gov.au. Block 0453 829 384 and report the message to ACMA at 0429 999 888.

Why would 0453829384 send me a message about winning a prize I didn't enter?

Scammers send these generic prize messages to thousands of numbers at once, betting that some recipients will fall for it. They don't know who you are or whether you're actually a client - the vague "1000th client" claim works because it applies to almost anyone. The message from 0453 829 384 is pure spam designed to get you to click the malicious link.

Is the link rhdec.biz/gzcrd safe to click?

No. The rhdec.biz/gzcrd link in the SMS from 0453 829 384 is not safe. Shortened URLs hide the actual destination, which is standard practice in phishing scams. Clicking it would likely take you to a fake website designed to steal your personal information, banking details, or login credentials. Do not click links from unsolicited text messages.

How can I block 0453 829 384 from texting me again?

Most Australian phones allow you to block contacts directly. In iPhone, open the message from 0453 829 384, tap the sender info, and select 'Block this Caller'. On Android, open the message, tap the three-dot menu, and choose 'Block number'. You can also report the SMS as spam to your carrier - they have tools to block bulk scam campaigns from numbers like 0453829384.

Should I reply to 0453 829 384 to tell them to stop?

No. Do not reply to the SMS from 0453 829 384. Replying confirms to the scammer that your number is active and monitored, which increases the likelihood they'll target you with more scams. Instead, delete the message, block the number, and report it to ACMA at 0429 999 888.

What makes the SMS from 0453 829 384 obviously a scam?

Several red flags indicate the message from 0453 829 384 (0453829384) is a scam: (1) you didn't enter any competition, (2) legitimate prizes are announced during business hours through official channels, not late-night text messages, (3) the message is impersonal despite claiming to know your name, (4) it uses a shortened URL to hide the actual link destination, and (5) it creates artificial urgency with 'Claim it now'. Real companies don't operate this way.