The Internal Revenue Service’s Criminal Investigation division is cautioning taxpayers and tax professionals to beware of scams related to the expanded Child Tax Credit in which fraudsters are trying to steal money and personal information.
The IRS began depositing and mailing millions of advance monthly payments of the Child Tax Credits to parents last week as part of the American Rescue Plan Act, in an effort to reduce the rate of childhood poverty (
The IRS CI division warned taxpayers to beware of various phone, e-mail, text message and social media scams targeting families who are eligible for the credit. Any communication offering assistance to sign up for the Child Tax Credit or to speed up the monthly payments is likely a scam. When receiving unsolicited calls or messages, taxpayers should not provide personal information, click on links, or open attachments as this may lead to money loss, tax-related fraud, and identity theft.
“Criminals look at these child tax credit payments as a way to steal from people,” said IRS – Criminal Investigation special agent in charge Albert Childress, according to the
The IRS warned scammers frequently create new schemes to attempt to catch taxpayers off-guard, but taxpayers should be aware that the IRS doesn’t initiate contact with taxpayers through email, text messages, or social media channels to request personal or financial information, even when it’s information related to the Child Tax Credit. The IRS also doesn’t leave pre-recorded, urgent, or threatening messages. Aggressive calls warning taxpayers about a lawsuit or arrest are fake. The IRS also won’t call taxpayers asking them to provide or verify financial information so they can obtain the monthly Child Tax Credit payments, nor will the IRS ask for payment via a gift card, wire transfer or cryptocurrency.
For taxpayers who are eligible for advance payments of the Child Tax Credit, the IRS is using information from their 2020 or 2019 tax return to automatically enroll them for advance payments. Taxpayers don’t need to take any additional action. Taxpayers who are not required to file a tax return or who have not provided the IRS their information, should visit
The IRS is offering a variety of tools to help taxpayers with the credit through its IRS.gov site, including a portal, an eligibility assistant, and a place where they can update their direct deposit information. The
Another tool allows taxpayers to opt out of the advance payments. Some tax professionals are advising clients to opt out if they are worried they will have to repay the money next year if their income is miscalculated by the IRS based on their old tax returns.
“You might consider opting out if, for example, you were near the income limits in 2019 or 2020, expect to earn more in 2021, and want to avoid excess payments,” wrote Brendan Walsh, a shareholder at the accounting firm Clark Schaeffer Hackett, in an
Separately, Senate Finance Committee chairman Ron Wyden, D-Oregon, is urging the IRS to make the Child Tax Credit tools available to mobile device users who don’t have internet access from computers. He sent a
“Improvements to the IRS Non-filer Sign-up Tool are critical,” Wyden wrote. “The portal is not designed to work on mobile devices, as intended by law, and has not been translated into languages other than English. While I deeply appreciate the tireless work of the dedicated staff at the IRS to quickly stand up this critical resource, I am concerned that technological and design constraints on the portal will prevent America’s most vulnerable communities—those who make so little income they previously did not file—from even applying for this important funding. This is because, as has become all too apparent over the course of the COVID-19 public health and economic crisis, many of the most vulnerable families in this country only access the internet via their mobile devices. Yet, the portal does not account for this reality, and is not optimized to work on mobile devices, or in languages other than English.”
He pointed out that mobile device optimization for consumer-facing government websites is required by law. The Connected Government Act of 2018 requires new and redesigned agency websites to be mobile-friendly.
“While I know the IRS worked with private-sector partners Intuit and the Free File Foundation to build the non-filer portal, which is not hosted on a government domain, the intent of this law is clear,” said Wyden.
He asked if the IRS used contractual requirements to mandate the development of mobile friendly websites with translations into more than just English, and if not, why not, as well as whether an explicit decision was made either by the IRS or its private-sector partners to not create a mobile-accessible website.