Avoid Cyber Crime During Tax Season

The IRS has been stepping up its education about tax-related identity theft. Cybercriminals use a variety of tools to scam taxpayers. Identity thieves call taxpayers and claim to be IRS employees. They demand payment of nonexistent tax debts or they tell taxpayers that the IRS needs to “verify” their personal financial information. Cybercriminals also use emails and social media to trick taxpayers into revealing their personal financial information. These scams are nationwide and leave no one untouched.

The IRS has partnered with tax professionals and the tax preparation industry to protect taxpayers from cybercriminals. Tax professionals must adhere to strict IRS security standards.

Many of these protections are unseen to taxpayers. The IRS has upgraded its return processing filters to discover fraudulent returns. The agency also has safeguards built into electronic filing. Several years ago, cybercriminals breached an IRS app but, according to the agency, criminals have not succeeded in penetrating the agency’s core processing functions.

Keep in mind that cybercriminals are most active early in the filing season. Identity thieves seek to file fraudulent returns early; before taxpayers file their legitimate returns. All too often, taxpayers first learn they are victims of identity theft when the IRS rejects their return.

If you have any concerns that your personal information may have been stolen or compromised, please contact your tax preparer at our office. Together, we can work with the IRS. The IRS has a special program for victims of identity theft.