Fake IRS Audit Letter
If you received a physical letter that looks like an IRS audit letter with a phone number to call, you are looking at one of the most repeated scam patterns of the year. These messages succeed because they impersonate something familiar and pile on urgency, pushing you to call the phone number and pay a fake settlement before you have time to verify with the real source.
The real IRS does not contact customers this way - and even when IRS does send you a legitimate notice, you can always confirm by looking up the notice type at IRS.gov/notices instead of acting on the message itself. FakeOrLegit is not affiliated with IRS; this guide is independent consumer-safety information.
Below we walk through the warning signs you can check yourself, the exact steps to take if you have already engaged, and the most common follow-up questions we see in our checker.
Warning signs
- The letter uses official-looking letterhead but contains a phone number or payment instruction that does not match the agency's published contact info.
- The return address is a PO box or unrelated address; real government letters list the agency's specific division and a real-looking case number you can verify by phone.
- Urgency or fear language pushes a deadline within 24 hours. Real organizations almost never time-bomb account actions that fast.
- There is a request for payment, login credentials, a verification code, or sensitive identifiers (SSN, full DOB, full card number). None of these are ever needed to resolve a legitimate notice.
- Spelling, grammar, or formatting is slightly off in places a real brand would catch. Scammers iterate but rarely match design systems exactly.
- The wording matches scam reports posted on Reddit's r/scams or in recent local-news headlines. A quick search of the exact phrase is one of the fastest checks you can do.
- The message references IRS but the link or sender is not on IRS's official domain. IRS-related actions should always be confirmed inside IRS's official app or website.
What to do
- Look up the agency's real phone number from the official .gov site and call to verify before acting on anything in the letter.
- Do not pay any amount, in any form, until you have confirmed the case number through the agency's published intake line.
- Run any link from the message through FakeOrLegit. The checker matches the URL against our heuristics and brand-impersonation database.
- If you already entered credentials, change the password and turn on two-factor authentication immediately. Sign out of all other sessions.
- If you already paid by credit card, dispute the charge with your bank within 60 days. Speed matters - earlier disputes win more often.
- Report to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov. If you lost money, also file a local police report so an official case number exists.
- Watch for follow-up scams referencing the same IRS pretext. Scammers often re-contact under a "refund" or "support" persona within 24-72 hours.
FAQ
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Disclaimer
FakeOrLegit provides automated risk signals based on publicly observable patterns. We do not guarantee that any site, email, or message is safe or unsafe. Always use your own judgment, and contact the real institution directly to verify any request before sharing personal or payment information.
FakeOrLegit is not affiliated with IRS. IRS did not send and does not endorse this analysis.