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Home/Guides/Government Impersonation
Step-by-Step Guide

How to Spot a Government Impersonation Scam.

Government impersonation scams use fear and authority to extract money and information. They threaten arrest, benefit suspension, or deportation. Understanding how government agencies actually communicate is the best defense.

Got a message from a "government agency"?

Paste it here — our AI detects government impersonation patterns.

No signup · 6 detection layers · Results in seconds · Cmd+Enter

01Know how agencies really contact you.

The IRS contacts by postal mail first, not phone calls. Social Security never threatens to suspend your number. Medicare doesn't cold-call about new cards. Immigration services don't demand payment over the phone.

02Recognize the threat pattern.

Government impersonators always threaten immediate, severe consequences: arrest, deportation, benefit suspension, license revocation. Real government agencies give you time and due process. They don't demand immediate payment.

03Verify independently.

If you receive a call claiming to be from a government agency, hang up and call the agency's official number (found on their .gov website). Spoofed caller IDs can show government numbers — you must verify independently.

04Remember: government never accepts gift cards.

No government agency anywhere in the world accepts payment via gift cards, wire transfer, or cryptocurrency. This is the single most reliable red flag for government impersonation scams.

Quick checklist.

[ ]The initial contact came by postal mail (for IRS, SSA)
[ ]No immediate threats of arrest or deportation
[ ]You verified by calling the agency's official .gov phone number
[ ]No payment requested via gift cards, wire transfer, or crypto
[ ]The communication allowed time for verification
[ ]No demand for personal information over the phone
Learn More
Read the full Government scam brief →
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Phone ScamPhishing EmailIdentity Theft
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