☰
- Home
-
Solutions
Transformative solutions we deliver
- GoCRM
- Integrations
- About Us
- Contact Us
- Let's Connect
- Home
- Solutions
- GoCRM
- Integrations
- About Us
- Contact Us
May 28, 2021
SMS compliance is no longer optional. As text messaging becomes one of the highest-performing communication channels for businesses, regulatory scrutiny has increased just as fast. With open rates hovering around 98%, SMS remains incredibly powerful – but only when used responsibly, legally, and transparently.
This in-depth guide explains what it is, who enforces it, why it matters, and how to follow it step by step. Along the way, we’ll also show how SimpSocial helps dealerships and businesses automate compliant SMS engagement without risking penalties, lawsuits, or customer trust.
SMS compliance refers to the legal, technical, and ethical requirements businesses must follow when sending text messages to consumers. These rules exist to protect individuals from spam, unwanted messages, and misuse of their phone numbers.
In short, SMS compliance ensures that:
Failing to follow the guidelines can result in:
SMS marketing may feel informal, but regulators treat it seriously. Multimillion-dollar lawsuits have been filed against well-known brands for sending messages without proper consent.
Beyond legal risk, poor SMS compliance leads to:
In contrast, compliant programs build trust, improve engagement, and protect long-term ROI.
SMS compliance in the United States is governed by both industry bodies and federal law.
The CTIA is the primary industry authority overseeing SMS messaging practices. It represents wireless carriers and enforces messaging standards that protect consumers from abuse.
Key CTIA responsibilities include:
While CTIA guidelines are not federal law, carriers follow them strictly, meaning non-compliance can instantly shut down your SMS program.
The Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) is enforced by the FCC and forms the legal backbone of SMS compliance.
The TCPA:
Because the TCPA is federal law, violations can result in severe financial consequences.
This SMS compliance checklist covers everything businesses need to operate legally and responsibly.
Opt-in consent is the foundation of SMS compliance.
Under the TCPA, businesses must obtain express written consent before sending marketing texts. This consent must be:
Providing a phone number alone is NOT consent.
Users text a keyword to a short code after seeing an advertisement, email, or in-store promotion.
Example:
Text DEALS to 12345 to receive offers
Users submit their number through an online form with clear disclosure about SMS messaging.
Best practice: include program details directly on the form.
Once someone opts in, send a confirmation text immediately. This protects both the subscriber and your business.
A compliant confirmation message must include:
Example Confirmation Message
[Company Name] Alerts: Get sales, offers & updates. Up to 4 msgs/month. Msg & data rates may apply. Reply STOP to cancel, HELP for info.
This message is critical for SMS compliance audits.
Transparency is a core principle of SMS compliance.
Your Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy should be:
Recommended locations:
This prevents confusion and reduces opt-out complaints.
Sending messages at inappropriate hours is a fast way to lose subscribers – and trigger complaints.
Best practices:
While the TCPA doesn’t specify exact hours, carriers and customers expect reasonable timing.
Every SMS must clearly identify who is sending it.
Each message should include:
Example:
[Brand Name]: Your appointment is confirmed. Reply STOP to opt out.
This requirement applies to every message, not just confirmations.
SMS compliance requires that subscribers can opt out at any time.
You must honor standard keywords such as:
Once a user sends one of these, you must:
Failure here is one of the most common compliance violations.
If a subscriber texts HELP, you must respond with:
Example:
For help, call 800-123-4567 or visit example.com/sms
This ensures transparency and customer support access.
If you change:
You must notify subscribers and request renewed consent.
Common reconfirmation prompts include:
This step protects your business from future disputes.
Managing SMS compliance manually is time-consuming and error-prone—especially for high-volume businesses like dealerships.
SimpSocial removes the complexity.
We turn every lead into a real opportunity. Our AI assistant Sarah instantly engages leads, sets appointments, and follows up post-sale. With built-in lead generation, a Power Dialer, automated messaging, and 24/7 AI engagement, your team never misses a lead, call, or sale.
SimpSocial empowers modern dealerships with two game-changing solutions:
This allows businesses to scale SMS campaigns confidently – without legal exposure.
SMS compliance is the set of laws and industry rules governing how businesses send text messages to consumers, ensuring consent, transparency, and easy opt-out.
Yes. The TCPA requires express written consent before sending marketing SMS messages.
Yes. Consumers can file individual or class-action lawsuits for TCPA violations.
Penalties include fines, lawsuits, carrier shutdowns, and permanent loss of SMS access.
Yes. Even transactional messages must follow identification and opt-out standards, depending on use.
SMS compliance isn’t just about avoiding penalties – it’s about building trust, improving engagement, and protecting long-term growth.
Businesses that treat compliance as a strategy – not a burden – see:
With the right systems in place – and platforms like SimpSocial – SMS compliance becomes effortless, scalable, and profitable.