This article is from Trend Micro.
Tax season is scam season! Posing as the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), scammers are making up tens of thousands of excuses to get in touch with you, in order to steal your money and personal information. Anyone can fall victim: make sure you’re able to spot these tax scams!
These are the top tax scams to watch out for this tax season.
Scammers are wasting no time in launching fake tax refund websites to exploit people. They have created copycat websites that look similar to legitimate government websites. In the first 3 months of 2022, we have already detected over 135,842 bogus websites. Below is an example:
To get you on these scam websites, scammers will send you text messages or emails that instruct you to file your taxes, claim refunds, or complete other tasks via the attached links. Once you’re on these fake IRS pages, you will run the risk of exposing personal details such as your home address, date of birth, and Individual Tax ID Number (ITIN).
Example Text: (irs):recently, we found that you haven’t fulfilled your latest tax deductions. Visit hxxps://resolve-irs[.]com/forms to fulfill.
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Recently, we’ve seen phishing attempts using the IRS Economic Impact Payments as a hook. In this scam, you’ll be told that your third round of COVID-19 Economic Impact Payments is available, prompting you to claim it via the embedded button.
Source: Reddit
If you click on the button, you will be taken to a fake IRS page and asked for personal information. Scammers will record the credentials you submit and use them for identity theft.
Scammers pretending to be from the IRS Taxpayer Advocate Service will reach out to you through phone calls or robocalls that require you to dial back.
They will claim that there’s a problem with your tax filing. Then they ask for your credentials such as SSN, Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN), or Identity Protection PIN. With this information, they can file a bogus tax return on your behalf and deposit the so-called refund into your account.
In other instances, what they want is money — they claim that you owe taxes or that a tax refund was a mistake. They will even threaten you with penalties, and demand you pay them via gift card or wire transfer.
Many people choose to hire a tax expert to handle tax filing procedures, but scammers are even targeting tax professionals.
Impersonating tax software providers, scammers send fake emails to tax preparers and falsely claim that they must update their Tax Pro account to continue accessing the tax filing system. The link in these emails will lead to phishing websites that collect tax professionals’ log-in credentials.
Always bear in mind that the IRS will NEVER:
The IRS recommends that those who think their credentials have been compromised take the following steps:
Stay safe out there, folks! Follow these guidelines and you’ll be well-prepared in the event of tax scam attempts. As ever, if you’ve found this article an interesting and/or helpful read, please do SHARE with friends and family to help keep the online community secure and protected.