An overview of the IRS’s 2022 Dirty Dozen tax scams
Compiled annually,
the Dirty Dozen lists a variety of common scams that taxpayers can
encounter anytime. The IRS warns taxpayers, tax professionals and
financial institutions to beware of these scams. This year’s list is
divided into five groups. Here’s an overview of the top twelve tax scams
of 2022.
Potentially abusive arrangements
The
2022 Dirty Dozen begins with four transactions that are wrongfully
promoted and will likely attract additional agency compliance efforts in
the future. Those four abusive transactions involve charitable
remainder annuity trusts, Maltese individual retirement arrangements,
foreign captive insurance, and monetized installment sales.
Pandemic-related scams
This
IRS reminds taxpayers that criminals still use the COVID-19 pandemic to
steal people's money and identity with phishing emails, social media
posts, phone calls, and text messages.
All
these efforts can lead to sensitive personal information being stolen,
and scammers using this to try filing a fraudulent tax return as well as
harming victims in other ways. Some of the scams people should continue
to be on the lookout for include Economic Impact Payment and tax refund
scams, unemployment fraud leading to inaccurate taxpayer 1099-Gs, fake
employment offers on social media, and fake charities that steal
taxpayers’ money.
Offer in Compromise "mills"
Offer
in Compromise or OIC "mills," make outlandish claims, usually in local
advertising, about how they can settle a person's tax debt for pennies
on the dollar. Often, the reality is that taxpayers pay the OIC mill a
fee to get the same deal they could have gotten on their own by working
directly with the IRS. These “mills” are a problem all year long, but
they tend to be more visible right after the filing season ends and
taxpayers are trying to resolve their tax issues perhaps after receiving
a balance due notice in the mail.
Suspicious communications
Every
form of suspicious communication is designed to trick, surprise, or
scare someone into responding before thinking. Criminals use a variety
of communications to lure potential victims. The IRS warns taxpayers to
be on the lookout for suspicious activity across four common forms of
communication: email, social media, telephone, and text messages.
Victims are tricked into providing sensitive personal financial
information, money, or other information. This information can be used
to file false tax returns and tap into financial accounts, among other
schemes.
Spear phishing attacks
Spear
phishing scams target individuals or groups. Criminals try to steal
client data and tax preparers' identities to file fraudulent tax returns
for refunds. Spear phishing can be tailored to attack any type of
business or organization, so everyone needs to be skeptical of emails
requesting financial or personal information.
A recent spear
phishing email used the IRS logo and a variety of subject lines such as
"Action Required: Your account has now been put on hold” to steal tax
professionals’ software preparation credentials. The scam email contains
a link that if clicked will send users to a website that shows the
logos of several popular tax software preparation providers. Clicking on
one of these logos will prompt a request for tax preparer account
credentials. The IRS warns tax pros not to respond or take any of the
steps outlined in the email. The IRS has observed similar spear phishing
emails claiming to be from "tax preparation application providers."
The list is not a legal document or a literal listing of agency enforcement priorities. It is designed to raise awareness among a variety of audiences that may not always be aware of developments involving tax administration.
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