If you’ve ever received a call or text like this:
- “You’ve been pre-approved…”
- “This is an urgent message about your account…”
- “Reply STOP to opt out…”
…and you actually did reply STOP…
…but the calls or texts kept coming…
You’re not alone.
And more importantly:
That may not just be annoying—it may be illegal.
Under federal law, companies are required to respect your request to stop being contacted.
If they don’t:
You may be entitled to compensation.
This guide will walk you through:
- Why these calls keep happening
- What the law actually says
- How to tell if your rights were violated
- What those violations may be worth
- What you should do next
🧠 First: What Counts as a Robocall or Robotext?
Not every call is illegal—but many are.
📞 Robocalls typically include:
- Automated or prerecorded messages
- Calls using auto-dialing systems
- Calls with a delay before a person answers
📱 Robotexts include:
- Mass marketing texts
- Alerts you didn’t sign up for
- Messages from unknown companies
👉 If it feels automated, repetitive, or unsolicited—it likely qualifies.
⚖️ The Law That Protects You (TCPA)
The main law here is the:
👉 Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA)
🚫 What the TCPA prohibits:
Companies generally cannot:
- Call or text you using automated systems
- Contact your cell phone without consent
- Continue contacting you after you revoke consent
🔑 The most important rule:
If you say “STOP,” they must stop.
🚨 What Happens When You Reply “STOP”?
When you reply STOP to a text or tell a caller to stop contacting you:
👉 You are legally revoking consent
💡 That means:
- They no longer have permission to contact you
- Any future automated calls/texts may violate federal law
👉 Even one additional message can be enough to create a violation.
🔍 Why You’re Still Getting Calls After Saying STOP
You might be wondering:
“If this is illegal, why is it still happening?”
Common reasons:
1. The system didn’t process your opt-out
- Poor compliance systems
- Delayed updates
2. Multiple vendors or call centers
- Your number is shared
- Different companies keep calling
3. Intentional disregard
- Some companies simply ignore opt-outs
4. Lead generation chains
- Your number was sold multiple times
- Each buyer continues contacting you
👉 Regardless of the reason:
They are responsible for stopping contact.
🚫 Signs Your Rights May Have Been Violated
Here’s how to tell if you may have a legal claim.
🔴 You replied STOP… and still received texts
This is the clearest violation.
🔴 You told a caller to stop—and they kept calling
Verbal requests count too.
🔴 You’re receiving multiple calls per week
Especially after opting out.
🔴 The calls feel automated or scripted
Robocalls are heavily regulated.
🔴 You don’t even know the company
Lack of consent + unknown sender = major red flag
👉 If any of these apply:
You may have a valid TCPA claim.
💰 What These Violations May Be Worth
This is where things get interesting.
📜 Under federal law:
Each violation may be worth:
- $500 per call or text
- Up to $1,500 per call or text if the violation was willful
💡 Example:
Let’s say:
- You replied STOP
- You received 10 more texts
👉 That could mean:
- $5,000 (minimum)
- Up to $15,000 in some cases
👉 And that’s not uncommon.
🧾 Real-World Scenario
Situation:
- You get marketing texts
- You reply STOP
- Messages continue for weeks
What that may mean:
- Multiple violations
- Clear evidence of opt-out
- Potential claim for compensation
👉 Many cases are resolved without going to trial.
⚠️ Do You Need to Prove the Calls Were Intentional?
No.
Important:
You do NOT need to prove:
- The company meant to break the law
- That they targeted you personally
👉 You only need to show:
- You revoked consent
- They continued contacting you
🧠 What About Consent?
This is where many cases are decided.
📌 Consent means:
You gave permission to be contacted
Common ways companies claim consent:
- Online forms
- Sweepstakes entries
- Fine print agreements
🚫 But here’s the key:
You can revoke consent at any time.
👉 And once you do:
They must stop.
🔥 Why These Cases Are So Common
Because companies rely on:
- Automated systems
- Massive contact lists
- Third-party vendors
👉 This leads to:
- Poor compliance
- Repeated violations
- High-volume mistakes
The system is built for efficiency—not accuracy.
📊 Why Most People Never Take Action
Even when violations happen, most people:
- Ignore the calls
- Block the number
- Assume nothing can be done
👉 That’s exactly why companies continue the behavior.
⚖️ What You Should Do Right Now
If you’re getting calls or texts after saying STOP:
Step 1: Save everything
- Screenshots of texts
- Call logs
- Voicemails
Step 2: Don’t engage further
- Don’t argue
- Don’t escalate
Step 3: Track frequency
- How often they contact you
- Dates and times
Step 4: Get a case review
- Determine if you have a claim
- Evaluate potential compensation
🚨 When You Should Act Immediately
You should take action if:
- Calls/texts continued after STOP
- You’re getting frequent messages
- The company is unknown
- You feel harassed or overwhelmed
👉 Timing matters.
The sooner you act:
- The stronger your case
- The easier it is to document
💡 Common Myths About Robocalls
❌ “I must have signed up for something”
Even if you did:
👉 You can revoke consent.
❌ “It’s just spam—nothing I can do”
Not true.
👉 You may have legal rights and compensation.
❌ “It’s not worth pursuing”
Many cases:
- Are straightforward
- Don’t require upfront payment
- Result in settlements
🧠 Big Picture: This Is About More Than Annoyance
These laws exist because:
- Consumers were being harassed
- Companies abused automated systems
- Privacy was being ignored
👉 Enforcement depends on:
people actually taking action
🚀 Find Out If You Have a Case
If you’ve:
- Replied STOP
- Asked a company to stop
- Continued receiving calls or texts
👉 You may be entitled to compensation.
👉 Start with a free case review
We can help you determine:
- Whether your rights were violated
- How strong your case is
- What it may be worth
CLICK HERE TO START YOUR FREE CASE REVIEW.
READ MORE ABOUT THE TELEPHONE CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT.
👉 You don’t have to tolerate it—and you may be able to get paid for it.
⚡ Final Thought
Most people think:
👉 “I’ll just block the number.”
But the better question is:
“Why are they still calling—and should they be paying for it?”


