Posted: Thu 9th Sep 2021

Students taking part-time jobs at “increased risk of falling victim” to scams, warns HMRC

Wrexham.com for people living in or visiting the Wrexham area
This article is old - Published: Thursday, Sep 9th, 2021

University students taking part-time jobs are at increased risk of falling victim to scams, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has warned.

Higher numbers of students going to university this year means more young people may choose to take on part-time work. Being new to interacting with HMRC and unfamiliar with genuine contact from the department could make them vulnerable to scams.

In the past year almost one million people reported scams to HMRC.

Nearly half of all tax scams offer fake tax refunds, which HMRC does not offer by SMS or email. The criminals involved are usually trying to steal money or personal information to sell on to others.

HMRC is a familiar brand, which scammers abuse to add credibility to their scams.

Links or files in emails or texts can also download dangerous software onto a computer or phone. This can then gather personal data or lock the recipient’s machine until they pay a ransom.

Between April and May this year, 18 to 24-year olds reported more than 5,000 phone scams to HMRC.

In the last year (September 2020 – August 2021) HMRC has:

  • Responded to 998,485 referrals of suspicious contact from the public. Nearly 440,730 of these offered bogus tax rebates
  • Worked with the telecoms industry and Ofcom to remove 2,020 phone numbers being used to commit HMRC-related phone scams
  • Responded to 413,527 reports of phone scams in total, an increase of 92% on the previous year. In April last year we received reports of only 425 phone scams. In August 2021 this had risen to 3,269
  • Reported 12,705 malicious web pages for takedown
  • Detected 463 COVID-19-related financial scams since March 2020, most by text message
  • Asked Internet Service Providers to take down 443 COVID-19-related scam web pages.

Mike Fell, Head of Cyber Security Operations at HMRC, said: “Most students won’t have paid tax before, and so could easily be duped by scam texts, emails or calls either offering a ‘refund’ or demanding unpaid tax.

“Students, who will have had little or no interaction with the tax system might be tricked into clicking on links in such emails or texts.

“Our advice is to be wary if you are contacted out of the blue by someone asking for money or personal information. We see high numbers of fraudsters contacting people claiming to be from HMRC.

“If in doubt, our advice is – do not reply directly to anything suspicious, but contact HMRC through GOV.UK straight away and search GOV.UK for ‘HMRC scams’.”

By June this year, more than 680,000 students had applied to university, and over 900,000 held part time jobs during the 2020-21 academic year.



Spotted something? Got a story? Email [email protected]



Have a look at...

Circus Starr returns to Wrexham with inclusive show in June

Tributes paid to two Wrexham teenagers killed in collision near Cannock

Mystery if Wrexham Council responded to Welsh Government on 20MPH review and why we were an outlier

Welsh health boards urged to help improve ambulance response times

Plaid Cymru election candidate Becca Martin vows “Political Earthquake” in Westminster

Golden milestone for top accountant who’s still working after breaking his back twice

North Wales film screenings to help increase dementia awareness

Flintshire Council committee to consider rule “prohibiting councillors seeking sexual favours from residents”

Sunset walk up Yr Wyddfa in aid of local children’s hospice!

Wrexham-based digital bank completes acquisition of CHL Mortgages for Intermediaries

A view from Carolyn Thomas – Welsh Labour’s North Wales Member of the Senedd

“Court of Appeal date set” for Wrexham’s LDP case