Tax Season Scams Are Starting Early. Here's the One That Hits Small Businesses First.
It's February. Tax season is ramping up. Your accountant is getting busier. Your bookkeeper is pulling documents. Everyone's thinking about W-2s, 1099s and deadlines.
Here's the part nobody puts on the calendar: the first real tax-season headache usually isn't a form. It's a scam.
And there's one that shows up before April even gets close because it's easy, believable and aimed straight at small businesses. You might already have it sitting in someone's inbox.
The W-2 Scam: How It Works
Here's the setup:
Someone in your company (usually whoever handles payroll or HR) gets an email that looks like it's from the CEO, owner or a senior exec.
The message is short and urgent:
"Hey, I need copies of all employee W-2s for a meeting with the accountant. Can you send them over ASAP? I'm slammed today."
It looks normal. The tone sounds right. Tax season is busy, so the urgency feels natural. The request seems reasonable.
So, your employee sends the W-2s.
Except the email wasn't from the CEO. It was from a criminal using a spoofed address or a look-alike domain.
And now that criminal has every employee's:
- Full legal name • Social Security number • Home address • Salary information
- Fake IRS notices demanding immediate payment • Phishing emails disguised as tax software updates • Spoofed messages from "your accountant" with malicious links • Fraudulent invoices timed to look like tax expenses
- Payroll/HR access and MFA
- Your W-2 verification rules
- Email protections that catch spoofing
- The one policy tweak most businesses miss