Short code 21541: who texts from it?

21541 is a US SMS short code registered to Chase (JPMorgan Chase), verified against the owner's own published documentation. What it carries: Chase self-service messages.

Short code 21541 at a glance

OwnerChase (JPMorgan Chase)
What the texts areChase self-service messages
Opt-outOne-time message; no subscription
Impersonation riskSometimes impersonated
SourceChase's own documentation
VerifiedJuly 4, 2026

Is a text from 21541 legit?

21541 is Chase's documented sender ID for these messages. Chase texts are sometimes impersonated, so judge any message by what it asks for rather than the number alone, and reach Chase through its official app or the number on your card if anything seems off.

A familiar sender is not a guarantee. Even a message that really comes from 21541 deserves the same caution: judge it by what it asks for, and never share a one-time code, password, or PIN because a text looks official.

Other Chase short codes

  • 207207 — Home Lending program alerts
  • 227777 — Home Lending application link
  • 23175 — Account services / payment reminders
  • 24273 — Chase Mobile text banking (24273 = CHASE); text commands for balances/activity
  • 242733 — One-time authentication / login verification codes
  • 24546 — Account services / payment reminders
  • 28107 — Fraud & account security alerts
  • 33172 — Home Lending program alerts

See all Chase short codes in the directory.

How to verify any business text

Whatever the sender shows, these five habits keep you safe from smishing:

  1. Don't tap links in a text you weren't expecting — even if the sender looks right.
  2. Open the company's official app, or type its web address yourself, instead of following a link.
  3. Call the number on your card, statement, or the company's official website — never a number the text gives you.
  4. Never share a one-time code, password, or PIN. A real company will never text asking you to read one back.
  5. Report smishing: forward the message to 7726 (it spells SPAM) and file it at reportfraud.ftc.gov.

Report a scam text: forward it to 7726 (which spells SPAM) so your mobile carrier can investigate the sender, then report it at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Don't reply or tap any links. More on 7726.

Look up another short code · Got a call instead? Look up the number

Frequently asked questions

Who texts from 21541?

21541 is a US SMS short code registered to Chase (JPMorgan Chase). Chase self-service messages. Short codes are the 5- and 6-digit numbers businesses send texts from, administered in the US by the CTIA.

Is a text from 21541 a scam?

21541 itself is Chase's verified short code, not a scam — but scammers impersonate Chase from other numbers, so a familiar-looking sender is never a guarantee. Judge any message by what it asks for: never share a one-time code or password, and don't tap links you didn't expect.

How do I stop texts from 21541?

One-time message; no subscription. If messages continue after you opt out, contact Chase through its official app or website rather than replying to the text.

How do I report a suspicious "Chase" text?

Forward it to 7726 (which spells SPAM) so your carrier can investigate, and report it at reportfraud.ftc.gov. Don't reply to the message or tap any links, and confirm anything important with Chase through its official app or the number on your card.

Compiled from each sender's own published SMS documentation — help centers, terms of service, and fraud-alert pages; the commercial CTIA short-code registry is not used. Every entry carries the owner's source link and is re-verified monthly. areacode.fyi is independent and not affiliated with any company named here.