In this paper I argue that the use of social nudges, policy interventions to induce voluntary cooperation in social dilemma situations, can be defended against two ethical objections which I call objections from coherence and autonomy. Specifically, I argue that the kind of preference change caused by social nudges is not a threat to agents’ coherent preference structure, and that there is a way in which social nudges influence behavior while respecting the agent’s capacity to reason. I base my arguments on two mechanistic explanations of social nudges, the expectation-based and frame- based accounts. As a concrete example of social nudges, I choose the “Don’t Mess With Texas” anti-littering campaign and discuss in some detail how it may ha...