According to this email, you are eligible to receive a “Payment Credit Issuance” from the UK’s HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC).
The email, which features the HMRC logo, instructs you to click a link to claim your tax refund.
However, the email is not from HMRC and clicking the link will not get you the promised refund.
Instead, the email is just one variant in a series of very similar tax refund phishing scams that have targeted UK taxpayers for a number of years.
If you click the link in the scam email, you will be taken to a fraudulent website and asked to complete a “Tax Refund Request” form. The fake website has been built to emulate the genuine HMRC site. It includes logos, graphics and footer information stolen from HMRC.
The fake refund form asks you to supply your name, address, and other identifying information, ostensibly as a means of verifying your identity. It also asks for your credit card numbers, supposedly so that your refund can be transferred directly to your credit card account.
After completing the form, you may see a final message stating that your refund request will be processed shortly.
But, meanwhile, online criminals can collect the information you supplied and use it to steal your identity. They can also use your credit card to make fraudulent transactions.
Phishing scam campaigns like this one are very common. They target taxpayers in many countries. Be wary of any unsolicited email or text message that claims that you can get a tax refund by clicking a link or opening an attached file.
HMRC has information about recognising and reporting phishing scams on its website.
An example of the scam email:
Original Source : https://www.hoax-slayer.net/hmrc-payment-credit-issuance-tax-refund-phishing-scam/