Each year thieves try to steal billions in federal
withholdings by stealing your identity. As the IRS focuses more attention
on this quickly growing problem, now is the time of year to be extra
vigilant.
Early tax filing season is the worst time
Your
federal tax account at the IRS currently has plenty of money withheld from
your paycheck during the course of the year. Until you file your tax
return, the IRS is not sure if it needs to pay some of it back to you in
the form of a refund.
Thieves
know this too, and will try to file a fraudulent tax return before you have
time to submit your own. When thieves file early, they can steal some of
your withholdings and be long gone by the time you file your own tax
return.
What you can do
- Beat them to the punch. The sooner you file your tax return, the less
likely a thief will beat you to your refund.
- Get an Identity Protection PIN. All taxpayers who can verify their identity can
get an Identity Protection PIN (IP PIN) from the IRS. The IP PIN is a
six-digit code known only to you and the IRS that helps prevent
identity thieves from filing fraudulent tax returns. If you want an IP
PIN, visit irs.gov/IPPIN.
- Check your credit reports. See if there is any suspicious activity on your
accounts and on your credit reports.
- Protect your ID. Be suspicious. Never give out your Social Security
Number, do not leave your credit card unattended, never give ID
information to someone who calls you, use the password function on
your phone, be aware of strange mail, and shred important documents.
Your best defense to IRS ID theft is to use best practices to protect
your information.
The IRS is becoming better at spotting fakes
If
the IRS suspects something is wrong with your filed tax return they will
send you a notice. If this happens to you:
- Respond immediately. Get the direct contact information from the IRS
website and let them know that you have a possible identity theft
problem.
- File an Identity Theft Affidavit (IRS Form 14039). This will record your problem with the IRS and they
will take extra steps to ensure your account activity is coming from
you and not the ID thief.
- File a police report.
- Contact the credit bureaus.
Having
your tax withholding stolen and then needing to unravel this problem within
the IRS is a major hassle. Try to stay vigilant and know that there are
steps to help protect your tax records. Thankfully, if the IRS pays out a
refund to someone stealing your identity, they are on the hook for this
loss, not you.
|