Is this IRS letter real or a scam?

Fake IRS letters, calls, and texts scare people into paying tax they don't owe. Paste what you received and get an instant read — genuine notice, questionable, or likely scam.

🔒 Nothing you paste is stored.

How to tell a real irs / tax notice from a fake

A genuine IRS notice arrives by physical mail first (the IRS doesn't start contact by email, text, or social media), shows a notice or letter number (CP### or LTR####), references a specific tax year and form, explains the issue and your right to question or appeal it, and directs payment to the 'United States Treasury' — never to an individual or by gift card.

Red flags

What to do

FAQ

Does the IRS contact you by phone or email first?

No. The IRS almost always makes first contact by physical mail. An out-of-the-blue call, email, or text demanding payment — especially by gift card — is a scam. Real notices carry a CP or LTR number you can verify on IRS.gov.

How do I know an IRS letter is real?

It has a notice/letter number (CP### or LTR####), names a specific tax year, explains the issue and your appeal rights, and directs payment to the U.S. Treasury. Verify it in your IRS.gov account. Paste it above to see what's missing or off.