# 100 Fake Text Prank Ideas to Send Friends (Harmless &amp; Funny)

> A big list of harmless, funny fake text prank ideas — wrong number bits, delivery alerts, autocorrect chaos, scam parodies and more. With realism tips.

_Published 2026-05-27 · 9 min read · PostMock_

The best prank texts are the ones where everyone laughs at the end. This is a big list of 100 harmless prank text ideas across every popular format — wrong-number bits, fake delivery alerts, autocorrect chaos, scam parodies, "you'll never guess what happened" cliffhangers, and the classic family-group-chat formats that go viral every time.

All of these work best as screenshots rather than live texts. A purpose-built [fake iMessage generator](/) lets you mock up the prank without actually sending anything, drop it into a group chat, and watch the reactions roll in. The result is a controlled prank where you decide the timing and reveal.

## How to send a fake prank text screenshot

The quick version: open a fake-chat generator, type both sides of the conversation, set the contact name and a believable time, download the PNG, share it. The whole flow takes under a minute. For full realism tips, see our [how to make a fake iMessage screenshot guide](/blog/how-to-make-fake-imessage-screenshot).

## Wrong-number pranks (the classic)

The wrong-number bit is the longest-running format in text-prank history. The setup: a stranger texts the wrong person, refuses to admit it's wrong, and the recipient slowly realises the entire conversation is built on a misunderstanding.

1. "Hey it's me, I changed my number" — refuse to say who "me" is
2. Texting from a vet about a "iguana ready for pickup"
3. Confirming a wedding the recipient knows nothing about
4. A delivery driver who keeps describing the wrong house in more detail
5. A landlord asking when rent is coming for an apartment they've never lived in
6. A group-project partner panicking about an assignment for a class they've never taken
7. Someone confirming a surprise party for a person who clearly isn't the recipient
8. A teacher complimenting a kid the recipient doesn't know
9. A friend dropping a wild secret meant for someone else
10. Texting "I'll be late, traffic is awful" with no further context

## Fake delivery and order alerts

People react fast to anything that looks like a notification. The format mimics real courier and shop alerts with absurd cargo.

11. "Your order of 47 rubber ducks is out for delivery"
12. "Pizza confirmed: pineapple, anchovies, no cheese"
13. "Subscription confirmed: Monthly Mystery Cheese"
14. "Your Uber is 2 minutes away" — when no Uber was booked
15. A gym confirming a 5 AM personal-training session
16. An airline confirming a one-way flight to Antarctica
17. "Amazon: 1x cardboard cutout of Nicolas Cage shipped"
18. A pet store confirming a stick insect adoption
19. A florist confirming 200 yellow roses for "Bob"
20. A DoorDash order of just ice cubes ($4.99)

## Fake "I have to tell you something" cliffhangers

These work brilliantly as a screenshot in a video — reveal one or two messages at a time.

21. "we need to talk" → about your birthday surprise
22. "you'll never guess who I just saw"
23. "I have to tell you something" → ends with something completely mundane
24. "I did something I shouldn't have" → spoiler: ate the last slice of pizza
25. "are you sitting down" → I'm not coming to your party because I'm sick
26. "I have huge news" → I'm going to bed early
27. "promise you won't be mad" → I used your charger
28. "I need to tell you before you find out from someone else"
29. "are you alone" → no reason
30. "we're not going to be able to do this anymore" → talking about Sunday brunch

## Autocorrect and typo chaos

Comedy here lives in misunderstanding rather than the prank itself.

31. Insist autocorrect changed an innocent word into something absurd
32. A conversation where every word gets replaced with "ducks"
33. Pretend your phone is stuck typing in Old English
34. Reply to everything with the wrong autocorrected name until they give up
35. Type increasingly nonsensical messages and blame the keyboard
36. Send "I love you" then immediately "I LOAF you, sorry phone"
37. A whole exchange where the recipient's name is autocorrected to a celebrity
38. "Sorry, my cat is texting"
39. Type entire message in caps, blame caps lock
40. Send the same word ("HELP") fifty times, claim a stuck key

## Family group chat pranks

The format is universal — every family chat has had at least one of these.

41. Mom finding out about something on Facebook
42. Dad replying "k" to wildly serious news
43. A relative discovering a new emoji and using only that one
44. Planning a family event in the chat until it collapses into chaos
45. Mom forwarding a chain message asking why her phone is "broken"
46. A sibling pretending to lock in plans on Mom's behalf
47. Dad's autocorrect failing spectacularly mid-rant
48. Mom posting a "happy birthday" message to the wrong person in the chat
49. A cousin announcing they're getting a tattoo — then revealing it's temporary
50. The "WHO LEFT THE MILK OUT" interrogation

## Roommate and friend pranks

51. "I adopted something today, don't be mad"
52. "I moved all the furniture, hope that's ok"
53. "I told them you'd do the speech"
54. "Quick question — is your full name spelled the way I think?"
55. A countdown to an event you completely invented
56. "I left something for you" → it's a single grape
57. "I'm bringing someone home" → it's a houseplant
58. "Our landlord is here" → spoiler: he's not
59. "Did you eat the last yogurt" → starts an investigation
60. "Are you okay?" → no follow-up, leave them spiraling

## Crush and dating bits

61. A "wrong-number" text that turns flirty
62. A delivery driver asking if "the cute one with the dog" is home
63. A bartender from last night texting to return "something you left"
64. "Hey, I was given your number by..." — vague mutual setup
65. A coffee shop barista who "got your number from the cup"
66. Spotify saying "your crush added you to a playlist"
67. A library saying "the book your crush requested is in"
68. A florist confirming flowers from "anonymous"
69. A friend asking if you saw "what they posted on their story"
70. A "tinder match" who turns out to be your boss

## Fake scam parodies (trolling the trolls)

These work as skits where you're trolling a fake scammer back.

71. Reply to "you've won a prize" by demanding payment from them
72. Pretend to be wildly enthusiastic and ask 100 questions
73. Turn the conversation into your own unrelated story until they leave
74. Pretend to be elderly and confused until the scammer gives up
75. Ask the "IRS" to accept Chuck E. Cheese tokens
76. Roleplay as a worse scammer trying to scam them back
77. "Your Netflix subscription has been cancelled" → I don't have Netflix
78. "Click this link to verify" → ignore, then ask for life advice
79. "Your package is delayed" → from where? When? Specifics please
80. Send fake bank-app replies that escalate into nonsense

## Celebrity and brand parodies

Obvious satire. Nobody should believe these are real.

81. A "talent agency" inviting your friend to audition for a cereal commercial
82. A made-up streaming service confirming their new show got greenlit
83. A "record label" asking about their shower-singing video
84. A parody brand offering sponsorship in exchange for "exposure and snacks"
85. A "celebrity assistant" arranging a meet-and-greet for a made-up event
86. Apple confirming they were chosen to "test the new iPhone in advance"
87. NASA confirming a citizen-astronaut application
88. A "Reddit moderator" awarding "Best Comment of the Year"
89. Spotify Wrapped sending an early "you listened to ABBA 5,000 times"
90. A music festival announcing they're "your guest of honor"

## Holiday and themed pranks

91. April Fools: a fake boss text about weekend overtime
92. Halloween: an unknown-number text "I'm at your door"
93. Christmas: Santa texting to confirm you're on the naughty list
94. New Year: a fake "your fitness tracker hit zero steps yesterday"
95. Valentine's: a fake florist confirming flowers from "your crush"
96. Mother's Day: a fake credit card alert for a $3,000 charge at "Spa"
97. Birthday: a fake DMV text saying your license needs renewal "today"
98. Summer: a fake "your tan reservation is ready" from a salon
99. Thanksgiving: a fake "we ran out of turkey" from your host
100. Tax season: a fake IRS audit notification (clearly absurd content)

## Tips that make any prank text funnier

A few principles that elevate every format:

- **Commit to the bit.** The funniest fakes stay deadpan. Don't break character mid-exchange.
- **Pace the reveal.** In a video, show messages one at a time so viewers can read along.
- **Keep it short.** Two or three quick bubbles usually beat one long paragraph.
- **Add a reaction.** A laugh or heart tapback on a bubble is the small detail most fakes forget.
- **End on the reveal.** The best prank screenshots build to a final punchline message that ties the whole thing together.

For more on selling realism, see our [how to make a fake iMessage screenshot](/blog/how-to-make-fake-imessage-screenshot) and [creators' fake text playbook](/blog/fake-text-messages-for-content-creators).

## Keep it kind (the ethics bit)

A prank is funny when everyone laughs at the end. It stops being a prank — and can become harassment or fraud — the moment you use a fake screenshot to scare, deceive, impersonate a real person, or make someone hand over money or information.

> Good rule of thumb: only prank people who will laugh with you, and reveal the joke quickly.

Don't fake messages "from" a real named person, a real company asking for money or personal info, or an emergency service. Don't use a fake screenshot as evidence in any real dispute. Treat these like meme templates — entertainment, not weapons.

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What's the best harmless prank text to send?**
Wrong-number bits are the safest and funniest — a stranger texting the wrong person spirals naturally and nobody gets hurt. Reveal the joke quickly.

**Q: How do I make a prank text look like a real screenshot?**
Use a fake chat generator, type both sides, set a believable contact name, time and battery, and write casually. A purpose-built [generator](/) handles the bubble shapes and status bar for you.

**Q: Are prank text screenshots legal?**
Harmless jokes between friends are fine. Using a fake to defraud, threaten, or impersonate a real person can be illegal — keep it to entertainment. The full legal framework is in our [is making fake screenshots illegal guide](/blog/is-making-fake-instagram-dm-illegal).

**Q: Which app should I fake the prank in?**
iMessage reads as classic and Western, WhatsApp is best for a global audience, Instagram DM feels the most Gen-Z. Pick whatever your friends actually use.

**Q: How long should a prank conversation be?**
Three to six bubbles is usually the sweet spot. Long enough to build a joke, short enough to deliver a punchline before attention drops.

Ready to make one? [Open the iMessage generator](/) and build your first prank screenshot in under a minute.

**Open the iMessage generator:** https://postmock.com/

## Related

- [50+ Prank Text Message Ideas (With Fake Screenshot Examples)](https://postmock.com/blog/prank-text-message-ideas)
- [How to Make a Fake iMessage Screenshot (Free, No Watermark)](https://postmock.com/blog/how-to-make-fake-imessage-screenshot)

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Source: https://postmock.com/blog/fake-text-prank-ideas-for-friends
