HMRC has written to the Chief Executives of Asda, Morrisons, Sainsbury’s, and Tesco to enlist their help in fighting a high-profile iTunes phone scam which is conning vulnerable and elderly people out of thousands of pounds.

Scammers have been preying on their potential victims by cold calling them and impersonating HMRC members of staff. They tell them that they owe large amounts of tax which they can only pay off through Apple’s iTunes vouchers. Victims are told to go to a local shop, buy these vouchers, and then read out the redemption code to the scammer.

The conmen then sell on the codes or purchase high-value products, all at the victim’s expense.

Following HMRC’s recent awareness campaign, several retail workers across the UK have warned customers buying hundreds of pounds worth of iTunes vouchers that they may be about to fall victim to the scammers.

Figures from Action Fraud show that there have been over 1,500 reports of this scam since 2016. The vast majority of the victims are aged over 65 and suffered an average financial loss of £1,150 each. Despite campaigns by HMRC and law enforcement agencies people are still falling victim to the scam, with the highest ever loss being reported last week of an 81 year old man losing £20,000 after being repeatedly targeted by the fraudsters.

HMRC is taking action daily to shut down scamming operations including identifying and initiating the take down of website links being used by criminals, blocking text messages, blocking emails, and recent high profile awareness campaigns.

Figures from Action Fraud show that there have been over 1,500 reports of this scam since 2016.The vast majority of the victims are aged over 65 and suffered an average financial loss of £1,150 each. Hertfordshire police reported an instance of an 81 year old man being conned out of £20,000 believed to be the largest ever recorded instance of this crime in the UK.

What to do if you are affected

  • Recognise the signs – genuine organisations like banks and HMRC will never contact you out of the blue to ask for your PIN, password or bank details
  • Stay safe – don’t give out private information, reply to text messages, download attachments or click on links in emails you weren’t expecting
  • Take action – forward suspicious emails claiming to be from HMRC to phishing@hmrc.gsi.gov.uk and texts to 60599, or contact Action Fraud on 0300 123 2040 to report any suspicious calls or use their online fraud reporting tool
  • Check GOV.UK for information on how to avoid and report scams and recognise genuine HMRC contact. If you think you have received an HMRC related phishing/bogus email or text message, you can check it against the examples shown in this guide

If you’d like read our earlier blog post on HMRC phishing scams take a look here.

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