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Tax scammers love chaos and Google is trying to shut them down

Tax scammers are ramping up again, and Google is rolling out quiet but powerful tools to help you spot fake calls, texts, emails and websites before they steal your refund.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Mar 19, 2026, 1:10 PM EDT
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Illustration of a woman working at a computer on tax documents surrounded by Google security icons, a shield with the Google “G”, a calendar marked “Tax Day”, a calculator, and symbols for secure payments, email protection, and account keys.
Image: Google
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Tax season is stressful enough without scammers circling your inbox, calls and search results like vultures. Google is trying to put some guardrails in place so you don’t accidentally hand your refund — and your identity — to a criminal instead of the tax department. Think of these tools as a mix of spam filter, lie detector and early‑warning radar, all working quietly in the background while you just focus on getting your filing done.

One of Google’s big messages this year is around phone calls that feel just a little too urgent or “too good to be true.” The core rule hasn’t changed: tax agencies do not suddenly call you out of the blue to offer surprise refunds or demand instant payment via gift cards, crypto or wire transfer. Pixel phones lean into that reality with Call Screen, which quietly filters out a large chunk of spam and robocalls before you even pick up, and with an on‑device AI scam detection feature that listens for classic fraud patterns like “there’s a problem with your account, you must pay right now.” When that AI hears those red‑flag phrases, your phone surfaces a visible alert plus sound and vibration so you can pause and think before sharing any details or sending money.

Scammers also know that text messages and DMs feel personal and urgent, which is why “your refund is ready, tap here” and fake “tax credit” links explode every filing season. Google has started treating suspicious messages almost like misinformation: on Android, Messages can flag sketchy texts using built‑in scam detection, and Circle to Search or Google Lens lets you literally circle a dodgy message on your screen and have Google’s AI vet it. In practice, that means if you get a WhatsApp or SMS that claims to be from the IRS or your tax portal, you can screenshot or circle it, tap into Lens or Circle to Search, and see an instant overview explaining whether it matches known scam patterns and what to do next. It’s basically a quick fact‑check button for those “is this real or am I about to get scammed?” moments.

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Fake tax websites are another quiet goldmine for fraudsters, because they look almost identical to legitimate filing portals or big‑name tax prep brands. Google’s Safe Browsing system tries to intercept those traps in real time by checking the sites you visit against a large database of known malware, phishing pages and scam domains. If you click a link from an email or an ad that leads to a site that has been flagged, Chrome can throw up a full‑screen warning before the page loads, giving you a chance to close the tab instead of typing in your Social Security number or account credentials. It’s not a license to click anything, but it is a helpful last line of defense when a convincing fake slips through your other filters.

Email, unsurprisingly, is still where a lot of tax scams live, and Gmail is trying to shout at you when something looks off. The service already blocks the overwhelming majority of spam and malware before it even hits your inbox, but when something suspicious gets close to you, Gmail adds aggressive red or yellow banners that say, in plain language, that this message might be phishing or pretending to be a trusted sender. If an email claims to be from the IRS, your payroll provider or even from Google itself, those banners are a hint to stop, hover over links, and if in doubt, go directly to the official site instead of clicking anything in the message. On top of that, Google is pushing people to go beyond passwords: using 2-Step Verification and passkeys makes it dramatically harder for a stolen password from a tax scam to turn into a full account takeover.

There’s also the quieter layer of protection happening in Google’s advertising ecosystem. Every year, shady “tax relief” services and fake preparers try to buy ads that look legit and then disappear with people’s money and data. Google says it leans on advanced verification and security tech to keep a lot of those bad actors out, but it also gives you transparency tools so you can do your own due diligence. When you see a tax-related ad in Search, you can tap the three‑dot menu and open the “About this advertiser” section to see who’s actually behind the ad, where they’re located and whether Google has verified their identity. Combined with your own research — for example, checking reviews, registration with tax boards or consumer complaints — that transparency helps you avoid handing documents to a pop‑up operation that vanishes after April.

Even with all of this tech, the boring fundamentals still matter. Consumer protection agencies keep repeating the same playbook because it works: file your taxes as early as you can so identity thieves have less time to file a fake return in your name, protect your Social Security number, and never share sensitive information over public Wi-Fi or with someone who contacted you unexpectedly. If something feels off — a “refund update” message you weren’t expecting, a caller demanding immediate payment, or an email asking you to log in through a strange link — hang up, close the tab, or ignore the message and instead contact the tax agency or company using the official website or phone number you look up yourself. The idea behind Google’s latest tools is not to replace your common sense, but to give it backup: filters that catch the obvious junk, AI that highlights subtle red flags and transparency that makes it harder for scammers to hide in plain sight.


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