How to verify the CRA has contacted you
With the holidays just around the corner, scammers could contact you pretending to be from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). Scammers are trying to trick individuals into making payments, and we’re doing everything we can to put a stop to this. That includes letting you know when and how we might contact you.
How to make sure the caller is a CRA employee and not a scammer
A legitimate CRA employee will identify themselves when they contact you. The employee will give you their name and a phone number. Make sure the caller is a CRA employee before you give any information over the phone. This will protect you from giving money or personal information to a scammer.
If you’re suspicious, this is how you can make sure the caller is from the CRA:
- Tell the caller you would like to first verify their identity.
- Request and make a note of their:
- name
- phone number
- office location
- End the call. Then check that the information provided during the call was legitimate by contacting the CRA. Please do this before you give any information to the caller.
- The caller does not give you proof of working for the CRA. For example, their name and office location.
- The caller pressures you to act now or uses aggressive language.
- The caller asks you to pay with prepaid credit cards, gift cards, cryptocurrency or some other unusual form of payment.
- The caller asks for information you would not enter on your return or that is not related to money you owe the CRA, for example, a credit card number.
- The caller recommends that you apply for benefits. You can apply for benefits directly on Government of Canada websites or by phone. Do not give information to callers offering to apply for benefits on your behalf!
- You can’t get the documents we’re asking for
- You need more time to reply
- you have been the victim of fraud
- a scammer has tricked you into giving personal or financial information
- local police service
- your financial institution
- credit reporting agencies
- think your CRA user ID or the password you use in personal dealings with the CRA has been compromised
- want to disable online access to your information on the CRA’s sign-in services
- want to re-activate online access to your information after it’s been disabled
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Date
Dec 05, 2022
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By
Amaan Fazal
Newsletter
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