20 Aug 2024
HMRC recently issued an urgent scam alert following  the circulation of a convincing scam letter.
The letter uses a font similar to that of HMRC's  official communications, and asks the reader to verify their financial  information.
The UK's national reporting centre for fraud and  cybercrime, Action Fraud, also warned that scams are not exclusively postal –  criminals use various methods to target their victims, including via phishing  emails and other malicious communication.
A spokesperson for HMRC said: 'Criminals are great  pretenders. They use various methods to try and dupe citizens and often mimic  government messages to make them appear authentic.
'Tax scams come in many forms. Some offer a rebate,  others tell you that your tax details are out of date, or threaten immediate  arrest for tax evasion. Never let yourself be rushed. If someone contacts you  saying they're HMRC, wanting you to urgently transfer money or give personal  information, be on your guard. We will also never ring up threatening arrest.'
HMRC recommends taking your time and checking its  scams advice page on the Gov.uk website.