IRS impersonation calls using AI-generated voices are surging ahead of the April 15 tax deadline. Scammers use official-sounding agency names like "Tax Resolution Oversight Department" to pressure seniors into immediate gift card payments. If someone calls claiming you owe taxes — hang up. Call the real IRS at 800-829-1040 to verify any genuine liability.
IRS impersonation scams are fraudulent phone calls, emails, or texts in which criminals pretend to be IRS agents to steal money or personal information. Callers typically claim you owe back taxes and threaten arrest, deportation, or license revocation unless you pay immediately — usually by gift card, wire transfer, or cryptocurrency. The IRS recorded more than 2,000 reports of social media IRS imposters in fiscal year 2025 alone. The single most important fact: the IRS initiates contact by mail only, never by unsolicited phone call, email, or text message.
What the IRS Will Never Do
The single most powerful piece of knowledge you can have is this: the IRS always initiates contact by mail through the United States Postal Service — never by phone, email, text, or social media. If you understand only one thing from this page, make it that.
The IRS has been clear and consistent about this policy for decades, yet each year hundreds of thousands of Americans are caught off-guard because scammers create the illusion of urgency so effectively that even people who know better can be tricked in the moment.
How These Scams Work
IRS impersonation scams follow a predictable formula designed to bypass your rational thinking by triggering fear and urgency. Understanding the playbook makes it much easier to recognize and resist.
The Classic Phone Scam
You receive a call — often with your local area code or a number spoofed to display "IRS" or "U.S. Government." The caller claims to be an IRS agent and says you owe back taxes that must be paid immediately or you will be arrested, deported, or have your Social Security benefits suspended.
They may know the last four digits of your Social Security number, your name, or your address — information they've purchased from data brokers or obtained through previous data breaches. This makes them seem legitimately official.
The caller insists you stay on the phone while you drive to a pharmacy or store to purchase gift cards — Google Play, iTunes, Amazon — and read them the card numbers. Gift cards cannot be traced or recovered once the numbers are shared. That is precisely why scammers demand them.
The 2026 AI-Powered Version
The IRS's own 2026 Dirty Dozen list — published annually to warn taxpayers of emerging fraud — specifically flags AI-enabled phone scams as a top threat. Scammers now use AI voice synthesis to create callers that sound authoritative, calm, and professional. The IRS reported that AI tools can now spoof caller IDs to display the actual IRS phone number (800-829-1040), making even tech-savvy people uncertain.
These calls also increasingly arrive via text and social media DM — the IRS reported over 600 social media impersonators during fiscal year 2025 alone. The IRS will only contact you through social media to share public updates — never to request personal information or payment.
The "We're Calling to Help You" Variant
Not all IRS scams use threats. A growing category uses offers — callers claim there's a tax credit you're entitled to, a refund waiting to be claimed, or a "tax relief program" you qualify for. These callers sound helpful and friendly. They ask for your Social Security number and banking information to "process" the refund or credit. There is no refund. They are stealing your identity.
Scammers use official-sounding names that don't exist: "Tax Resolution Oversight Department," "IRS Criminal Investigation Bureau," "Federal Tax Authority," "Bureau of Tax Enforcement." None of these are real. There is only one IRS: the Internal Revenue Service at IRS.gov.
7 Warning Signs It's a Scam
- They called you first. The IRS sends letters through the mail before ever calling. A first-contact phone call is always a scam.
- They demand immediate payment. Real tax debts can always be appealed and payment plans arranged. Legitimate agencies never demand instant payment on first contact.
- They want gift cards, wire transfers, or crypto. These payment methods are untraceable. The IRS accepts checks, money orders, and direct bank payments through IRS.gov only.
- They threaten arrest. The IRS does not have the authority to arrest anyone. The Department of Justice handles criminal tax matters, which involve court proceedings — not phone calls.
- They tell you not to hang up. Keeping you on the phone prevents you from calling family or verifying anything. It's a deliberate control tactic.
- They want you to keep this secret. Any instruction to avoid telling family members is a classic scam tactic. Legitimate agencies encourage you to get help.
- The caller ID shows "IRS." Caller ID can be completely fabricated. The number displayed means nothing. If in doubt, hang up and call 800-829-1040 yourself.
What If You Actually Owe Taxes?
This is the question scammers are counting on — they know many people aren't sure whether they might have a tax problem, and that uncertainty keeps them on the line.
If you think you might legitimately owe taxes, hang up on anyone who calls you and contact the IRS directly:
Phone: 800-829-1040 (use this number you look up yourself — never call back a number a caller gave you)
Online: IRS.gov — create or log into your IRS online account to see your actual tax balance
Mail: Your real IRS correspondence will have a notice number, the IRS letterhead, and instructions for responding by mail or phone
In person: IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers (TACs) are available by appointment — find yours at IRS.gov/help/tac
What To Do If You've Already Sent Money or Given Information
If you realize you've been scammed — even if it was just moments ago — take these steps immediately. Time matters, particularly for bank transfers and gift cards.
- Stop sending money immediately. Do not send more even if the caller insists it's needed to "complete" the process or "release" your funds.
- Contact your bank. Call the number on the back of your card or bank statement. Tell them you were scammed and ask them to stop any pending transfers. Wire transfers may be reversible within 24 hours.
- Report gift cards. If you purchased gift cards, call the issuing retailer's fraud line immediately — some can deactivate unused card balances. Keep all receipts and card information.
- Report to TIGTA. Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration handles IRS impersonation: 800-366-4484 or tigta.gov
- Report to the FTC. File at ReportFraud.ftc.gov — this creates a legal record and helps authorities track scam operations.
- Place a fraud alert. Contact the three credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) to place a fraud alert on your file.
Protecting Yourself Going Forward
- Create an IRS online account at IRS.gov/account — you can always see your real balance and any pending notices
- Sign up for IRS identity protection PIN (IP PIN) — this 6-digit code prevents anyone from filing a tax return in your name
- Register with the Do Not Call Registry at DoNotCall.gov (won't stop scammers but reduces legitimate telemarketing)
- Consider a call-blocking app — Nomorobo, Hiya, or your carrier's built-in spam call blocking
- Talk to family — tell your adult children or trusted friends about these scams so they can help verify calls if needed
Frequently Asked Questions
Your Social Security number is not secret — it has been exposed in data breaches affecting hundreds of millions of Americans, and scammers purchase these databases. A caller knowing your SSN does not make them the IRS. The IRS will never call you unsolicited. Hang up and verify directly by calling 800-829-1040.
No. Caller ID spoofing is inexpensive and widely used by scammers. Any number — including the IRS main line or local police — can be faked. Caller ID is not a reliable indicator of who is calling. All legitimate IRS contact begins with a mailed letter.
No. The IRS does not initiate contact by email, text, or social media. If you receive such an email, do not click any links. Forward it to phishing@irs.gov, then delete it. This applies regardless of how official the email looks.
Hang up on any unsolicited caller and contact the IRS directly at 800-829-1040 or review your account at irs.gov/account. A legitimate tax debt will always be communicated first by mail, and you will have time to verify and respond. The IRS does not demand immediate payment by gift card under any circumstances.
Call the gift card retailer's fraud line immediately — if cards haven't been drained yet, they may be able to freeze them. Report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov and to TIGTA at 800-366-4484. Recovery is difficult but acting within hours significantly improves your chances.
Report to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA) at 800-366-4484 or at tigta.gov. Also report to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. If you received a scam email, forward it to phishing@irs.gov. Your report is used to track and prosecute these operations.
A Real Case — What Actually Happened
Source: U.S. Attorney's Office, Western District of Pennsylvania · February 6, 2023 · DOJ Press Release · Sentencing — established fact
From March 2016 through August 2017, India-based call centers ran an IRS impersonation operation targeting Americans. The call centers used U.S.-based phone numbers — programmed by American co-conspirators — to appear domestic. Victims received automated recordings claiming to be from the IRS about unpaid taxes; those who called back reached agents demanding gift card payments. Michael Galanis of Jeannette, Pennsylvania, activated and programmed the cell phones used to route these calls. He was convicted of conspiring to commit wire fraud and sentenced to 12 months federal prison. Total losses in his case: $150,000–$250,000. A co-conspirator, Ronnell Taylor Jr., destroyed evidence including prepaid credit cards, phones, and documents after learning Indian co-conspirators had been charged.
IRS & Government Impersonation — 2025–26 Data
| Metric | Figure | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Losses to government impersonation (all ages, 2024) | $789 million | FTC Consumer Sentinel 2024 |
| Average loss per victim | ~$32,000 | BBB Scam Tracker 2025 |
| Most targeted age group | Adults 65–74 | FTC 2025 |
| IRS social media imposters (FY2025) | 600+ | IRS Dirty Dozen 2026 |
| How the IRS first contacts taxpayers | Mail only — never unsolicited phone/email | IRS.gov official policy |
| IRS phone (taxpayer services) | 800-829-1040 | IRS.gov |
Loss figures from the FTC Consumer Sentinel 2025 and IRS Dirty Dozen 2026. Self-reported figures underestimate actual totals.
Sources Used on This Page
All statistics drawn from primary government sources. This page is reviewed on an ongoing basis as new data becomes available.
Last updated: April 2026