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Tax scams spike as filing day gets closer

United States, USATuesday, April 7, 2026

Tax Refund Fraud: How Crooks Steal Your Money Before You Even File

As April looms, fraudsters are sharpening their tactics—not with brute force, but with calculated deception. Gone are the days of mailbox break-ins or brute-force bank hacking. Today’s thieves weaponize Social Security numbers to file fake tax returns and claim refunds before you even realize yours was targeted. Worse? You might not discover the theft until you file your own return—only to receive the dreaded IRS response: "Your refund has already been issued."

Who Bears the Brunt?

This scheme preys on those who don’t typically file taxes—low-income workers, retirees, or individuals with minimal earnings. The aftermath is brutal: The IRS may blindly send a tax bill for income you never earned, and untangling the fraud can take years of bureaucratic battles.


Two Common (and Costly) Scams

  1. Fake Tax Returns Using Your SSN Thieves file a return under your name, directing refunds to their accounts. Your only warning? The IRS rejects your legitimate filing as a duplicate.

  2. Identity Theft in the Workplace Someone uses your SSN to get hired, their employer reports wages to the IRS, and you’re left with an unexpected tax bill. Proving it wasn’t you? Expect a two-year slog—the IRS is swamped, with a backlog of fraud reports stretching into obscurity.

Why the IRS Isn’t Sounding the Alarm

Peak tax season pushes the agency into refund-maximization mode, not fraud detection. Despite flagging over two million suspicious returns annually, most victims only uncover the theft long after April 15. By then, the money is gone—and so is their peace of mind.

Bottom Line

Identity theft thrives in the shadows. The best defense? Stay vigilant, file early, and treat your SSN like Fort Knox. The IRS won’t fix this for you—only you can. </article>

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