The IRS has this advice for anyone who receives an email claiming to be from the IRS or directing you to an IRS site:
- Do not reply to the message;
- Do not open any attachments. Attachments may contain malicious code that will infect your computer; and
- Do not click on any links in a suspicious email or phishing website and do not enter confidential information. Visit the IRS website and click on 'Identity Theft' at the bottom of the page for more information.
1. The IRS does not initiate contact with
taxpayers by email or social media channels to request personal or
financial information;
2. The IRS never asks for detailed personal
and financial information like PIN numbers, passwords or similar secret
access information for credit card, bank or other financial accounts;
3. The address of the official IRS website is
www.irs.gov. Do not be misled by sites claiming to be the IRS but
ending in .com, .net, .org or anything other than .gov. If you discover a
website that claims to be the IRS but you suspect it is bogus, do not
provide any personal information on their site
and report it to the IRS;
4. If you receive a phone call, fax or
letter in the mail from an individual claiming to be from the IRS but
you suspect they are not an IRS employee, contact the IRS at
1-800-829-1040 to determine if the IRS has a legitimate need
to contact you. Report any bogus correspondence. Forward a suspicious
email to
phishing@irs.gov;
5. You can help the IRS and other law
enforcement agencies shut down these schemes. Visit the IRS.gov website
to get details on how to report scams and helpful resources if you are
the victim of a scam. Click on "Reporting Phishing"
at the bottom of the page.
(all quoted directly from IRS)
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