Beware of Scammers Posing as the IRS

Identity thieves may try to contact taxpayers through fraudulent calls, emails, texts and social media messages pretending to be the IRS. Here’s how taxpayers know when it’s the IRS that contacts them.

Email, text and social media

The IRS will mail a letter or notice before calling or emailing.

The IRS does not:

Common IRS-related online scams include:

Scammers’ messages often direct taxpayers to click fraudulent links they claim are IRS websites or other online tools.

Phone calls

After mailing a notice or letter to a taxpayer, IRS agents may call to confirm an appointment or discuss items for a scheduled audit. Taxpayers should know that:

Letters and notices

A letter or notice is usually the first contact a taxpayer gets from the IRS contacts. If a taxpayer gets a suspicious letter or notice, they can check to see if it's really the IRS:

Warning signs of a scam

If taxpayers get an unexpected letter, email or text that claims to be from the IRS or another trusted source – like a bank, a credit company or a tax software provider – here are some tell-tale signs that it’s a scam:

Taxpayers who receive a request from IRS in the mail or by phone can always contact IRS customer service to authenticate it.

Additional Tax and Fraud Prevention Resources