Iowa Attorney General Brenna Bird announced tips for avoiding tax or IRS scams during the 2024 tax filing season.
Common tax scams include:
- Email Phishing Scams: Email messages claiming to be someone from the IRS, Treasury Department, or a tax preparer requesting personal or financial information.
- Phone/Imposter Scams: Calls or text messages threatening arrest, tax penalties, and even license cancellation or deportation if someone does not pay money or provide personal information.
- Identity Theft: Fraudulent filing of a tax return using someone else’s information to steal refunds.
The Iowa Attorney General’s office investigates fraud, seeks reimbursement and relief for fraud victims, ensures fair competition in the marketplace, and aims to protect Iowans from falling victim to scams or fraud.
Iowans should know that the IRS will never:
- Threaten immediate arrest or lawsuit.
- Initiate contact by text, email, or phone to request personal or financial information.
- Demand immediate payment using unconventional methods such as cash, cryptocurrency, wire transfer, money-transfer apps (Cash App, PayPal, or Venmo), gift cards, or prepaid debit cards.
- Leave pre-recorded, urgent, or threatening messages, particularly on voicemail or answering machine.
- Know the IRS operates by mail: If you owe taxes, the IRS will typically send a paper bill as first form of contact.
- Question and appeal your tax bill: The IRS gives taxpayers the opportunity to question or appeal any amount owed before demanding payment.
- Avoid suspicious links and attachments: These can contain dangerous software and malware designed to steal your information.
- Hang up on suspicious calls: If you don’t owe taxes and receive a call claiming to be from the IRS, do not provide any information. Hang up.
Original source can be found here.