Daily Express

Tax scammers target students with fake emails

- By Vicky Shaw Finance reporter

FRAUDSTERS are bombarding university students across the country with fake tax refund emails, HM Revenue and Customs is warning.

HMRC said it is the first time it has seen a tax scam attack directly targeting university students in such high volumes.

The tax authority has received thousands of fraud reports in just a few weeks from students at colleges across the UK.

The scammers are using seemingly legitimate university email addresses to appear convincing, such as “@uc.ac.uk”.

Fake emails may promise people they are owed some money in an attempt to obtain their personal informatio­n.

They may appear to suggest to students that their university has been informed that they are due a tax rebate from HMRC.

Fraudulent emails and texts will regularly include links which take students to websites where their informatio­n can be stolen.

Tax scams are targeting students at hundreds of universiti­es, HMRC said.

It said it is encouragin­g all universiti­es to raise awareness of scams, and many have already started taking action to warn their students of the risks. HMRC is encouragin­g all students to be aware of the potential tax scams and said it specifical­ly encourages some universiti­es to raise awareness about the issue.

It said it has had relatively high volumes of reports to its “phishing” service relating to the following universiti­es – Aberdeen, Bristol, Cambridge, Durham, Imperial College London, King’s College London, Manchester Metropolit­an, Newcastle, Nottingham, Plymouth, Queen Mary (London), Queen’s (Belfast), Southampto­n, Sussex, University College London and Warwick.

HMRC has also had reports relating to other universiti­es. It said it has used cutting-edge technology to block half a billion phishing emails since 2016.

Director of Action Fraud Pauline Smith said: “Devious fraudsters will try every trick in the book to convince victims to hand over their personal informatio­n, often with devastatin­g consequenc­es.

“It is vital that students spot the signs of fraudulent emails.”

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