Tax season creates a perfect storm for fraud.
Your clients are gathering W2s, 1099s, Social Security numbers, employer details, and banking information. They’re logging into accounts they rarely touch. They’re moving quickly because they want their refund.
And scammers are waiting to capitalize.
In 2024, the FTC received more than 1.1 million identity theft reports, and consumers reported more than $12.5 billion in fraud losses overall.
The risk is not just coming from complex cyberattacks. It often starts with seemingly innocent touchpoints: a text, a link, a “refund” message that looks official. In 2024 alone, consumers reported losing $470 million to scams that started with text messages.
When one bad click can cost a refund, rack up new accounts, and trigger months of cleanup, tax season becomes your moment to add protection, not just guidance.
In this article, you’ll discover:
- Why tax season is a high-risk time for identity theft and refund fraud
- A simple client action plan you can share
- The most common red flags clients should watch for
- What happens if your client is impacted
- How to use tax season to deepen relationships and drive revenue
Why Tax Season is High-Risk in 2026
Tax season creates the conditions criminals look for: a mass exchange of sensitive personal information, moving quickly across email, portals, mail, and third-party preparers.
Clients are uploading documents, responding to refund status updates, and trying to stay on deadline. Scammers try to insert themselves into that workflow.
Two patterns matter most right now:
- Refund-themed messages are a common entry point: The FTC warned in January 2026 that texts or emails claiming a refund is “processed” or “approved” often push people to click a link and enter SSNs and banking details.
- Digital impersonation spikes during filing season: The IRS warns about phishing and smishing and emphasizes that it does not make initial contact through email or social media channels.
The key takeaway is simple.
During the tax season, the risk feels real. Clients are paying attention - that makes this a natural moment to talk about protection.
A Simple Tax-Season Safety Plan for Your Clients
It helps to give your clients a clear baseline for what “safe behavior” looks like during tax season.
Encourage clients to:
- Use official refund tracking tools only: Refund status should be checked through IRS-approved resources like “Where’s My Refund?” or the IRS2go app.
- Be cautious with refund messages: Unsolicited texts or emails asking for identity or banking information should be treated as suspicious until verified through official channels.
- Set up an IRS Identity Protection PIN: An IP PIN helps prevent someone else from filing a tax return using a client’s Social Security number.
- Choose tax preparers carefully: The IRS warns against preparers who refuse to sign returns, promise unusually large refunds, or base fees on refund size.
- Secure rarely used accounts: Updating passwords and enabling multi-factor authentication is especially important for tax, payroll, and financial accounts used only once a year.
- Add credit file protection when appropriate: Fraud alerts and credit monitoring can help catch identity misuse early if tax information is compromised.
With these basics in place, clients are better prepared to spot problems before damage spreads.
Related: IDIQ Partners IDIQ Partners with Three National Tax Associations
The Most Common Tax Season Scams Clients Fall For
Tax scams aren’t always obvious. Many look-like routine financial messages or even helpful advice.
Educating your clients on the most common patterns can help them pause and verify before handing over the information needed to file a fraudulent return or steal a refund.
- “Refund approved” texts and emails: These messages claim a refund is waiting and pushing the receiver to click a link to verify their identity or banking information. he FTC specifically warned about this pattern in 2026.
- IRS impersonation texts or calls: Scammers pose as the IRS, using urgency, fear, and threats to push action. They may promise a “too good to be true” refund, threaten that clients must pay now or face arrest or deportation, or provide fraudulent website links that take users to harmful websites instead of IRS.gov.
- Social media “refund hacks” and bad advice: Social media can be one of the most overlooked tax season risk areas, because it doesn’t look like a scam at first. It can look like financial advice, posted confidently, shared by someone who seems credible. But bad tax advice on social media can mislead taxpayers about their credit or refund ability. In some cases, these posts are doing more than spreading misinformation; they may route taxpayers towards links that connect them directly with cybercriminals.
- Tax Refund Advance Scams:Some scams exploit confusion around refund advances. Criminals steal a taxpayer’s personal information, impersonate them, and file a fraudulent return through a tax preparation service. That service then approves a refund advance based on the fake return, and the scammer routes the advance to their own accounts. By the time anyone realizes what happened, the scammer is long gone - and taxpayers have lost refund money AND must repay the loan taken out in their name.
If your client gets hit, the worst outcome is not just the stolen refund. It’s the follow-on fraud that spreads into credit, banking, and future filings.
Related: Protecting Your Clients in the Age of Evolving Fraud
What To Do If Your Client Is Impacted by Tax Scams
This is a high-stress moment for clients. Your job is not to diagnose a tax issue. Your role is to create a clear sequence of next steps, reduce panic, and help protect their credit file from follow-on fraud.
Recommended next steps include:
- Have your client create an official identity theft report: Recommend they report the incident at IdentityTheft.gov or call the FTC. This creates documentation and a recovery plan they can follow.
- Have your client contact the IRS identity theft unit: Recommend they contact the IRS for identity theft assistance so the IRS can help address tax-account risk and identity verification steps. The IRS specifically directs identity theft victims to specialized assistance at 800-908-4490.
- If needed, file IRS Form 14039: If your client cannot e-file because a return was already filed under their SSN, IRS guidance is to file a paper return and include Form 14039.
- Protect against follow-on fraud: Tax fraud often leads to broader identity theft issues. Credit monitoring and fraud alerts help detect new activity.
- Close the loop on financial accounts: Recommend your client contact any banks and financial institutions where their accounts may be at risk, especially if the tax refund scam involved their banking details or logins.
How You Can Use Tax Season To Deepen Relationships And Drive Revenue
Tax season provides credit professionals a natural reason to check in. When protection is the focus, your outreach will feel helpful, not promotional.
Check In Proactively
Here’s a sample client message you can share:
“Subject: A quick tax-season safety reminder
Tax season is a common time for refunds and identity scams. Before you file, here are a few reminders to help protect your information:
- Use official IRS tools to check your refund
- Ignore messages asking you to click links or share personal details
- Consider setting up an IRS Identity Protection PIN
- Let me know if anything looks unusual
If you would like, we can also do a short tax-season protection review check to walk through these steps together.”
Offer a Tax Season Protection Review
A quick check-in can make all the difference. Plan time to meet with clients, providing a structured time to help them identify risks and recommend the right next steps.
Discussion items:
- Create an IP PIN plan, explaining why it matters and how to get it
- Review the top refund scam patterns they should avoid
- Scan for credit red flags: new accounts, unexpected inquiries, or address changes
- Share official refund tracking resources
Offer add-ons that inspire confidence
Credit professionals can keep support simple while still giving clients meaningful protection. One of the easiest ways to do that is to offer optional add-ons powered by IDIQ, so clients can choose the level of coverage that fits their situation.
By partnering with IDIQ, you can offer clients:
- Credit monitoring: Help clients stay aware of changes that may signal follow-on fraud, including new accounts, inquiries, or suspicious activity.
- Identity theft protection: Give clients added coverage during a season when personal data is moving fast and scams are most active.
- Family protection monitoring: Extend protection beyond the primary filer, which can matter when households share devices, documents, and financial accounts.
- Identity restoration support: Provide guided help if identity theft occurs, so clients aren’t left trying to navigate recovery steps alone.
Because tax season creates urgency and real vulnerability, clients are often more receptive to protection offerings during this window, especially when they are positioned as a practical layer of support.
Final Thoughts
Tax season is a high-risk season. Your clients are moving sensitive data quickly, and scammers are waiting to take advantage.
If you want to build loyalty in 2026, treat this time as a client protection program: a short review, a simple checklist, and a clear offer for monitoring and support.
For partners who want to turn this into a repeatable client program, IDIQ makes it easier to deliver protection at scale. With IdentityIQ tools, partners can pair education with action, offering identity theft protection, fraud alerts, three-bureau credit monitoring, plus credit reports and score tools that help clients stay informed and protected throughout tax season and beyond.
IDIQ is a financial wellness company. IDIQ does not provide legal advice. The information on the website is not legal advice and should not be used as such.









