Spam texts after STOP

If they text after STOP, do not delete the thread. Preserve it.

Replying STOP should usually be the end of the conversation. When a company keeps texting anyway, the message thread becomes the proof.

StopRingingMe helps organize screenshots, sender numbers, opt-out replies, dates, links, and company details into a clean demand packet.

1

Screenshot the entire thread

Capture the original message, your STOP reply, later messages, sender number, dates, and links.

2

Identify the business

Save landing pages, brand names, phone numbers, domains, and any company behind the texts.

3

Document the timeline

The dates and order matter: first message, STOP, follow-up messages, and any additional opt-outs.

Why post-STOP texts matter

The phrase STOP is useful because it creates a simple timeline. If messages keep arriving afterward, your packet should make that easy to see.

The goal is not to sound legalistic. The goal is to make the evidence impossible to ignore.

Educational information and document automation only. StopRingingMe is not a law firm, does not provide legal advice, and does not guarantee outcomes.

Frequently asked questions

Should I delete spam texts after replying STOP?

No. Preserve the thread, including your STOP reply and later messages. Screenshots and dates help show the timeline.

What if the sender uses different numbers?

Save all sender numbers and show how the messages are connected by brand, links, offer, or timing.

Is StopRingingMe legal advice?

No. StopRingingMe provides educational information and document automation, not legal representation or advice.

Ready to make them pay attention?

Turn the messy proof into a packet you can actually use.

Bring the screenshots, call logs, STOP replies, voicemail notes, and company details. StopRingingMe turns them into a cleaner timeline, evidence summary, and demand letter draft.