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They’re pretending to be SARS – and taxpayers are falling for it – IOL

South African taxpayers are being warned of a surge in fraudulent emails and SMS messages claiming they owe money
Image: Freepik
With tax season approaching, South Africans are again being targeted by a surge in fake SARS emails and SMSes demanding urgent payments, as scammers exploit filing uncertainty, deadlines, and taxpayer anxiety.
IOL previously reported that the South African Revenue Service (SARS) has set out the key rules, deadlines and filing requirements for the 2026 tax season, along with a stronger push toward digital filing and stricter enforcement of deadlines.
Although the filing season has not officially opened, SARS has already published guidance in the Government Gazette, giving South Africans a clear idea of what to expect this year.
SARS has confirmed the following deadlines:
The official opening date for filing has not yet been announced.
The official opening date has not yet been confirmed, but that has not stopped scammers from sending fraudulent messages, preying on taxpayers’ fears and attempting to collect payments for fake tax debts.
South African taxpayers are being warned of a surge in fraudulent emails and SMS messages claiming they owe money to the South African Revenue Service (SARS).
According to Junaid Bhayla, Team Lead for Tax Debt at Tax Consulting South Africa, these scams are becoming increasingly sophisticated, often mimicking official SARS correspondence and using urgent language to pressure recipients into making payments.
He said that the proliferation of these scams is partly fueled by heightened SARS enforcement, which scammers exploit to make their messages appear more credible.
SARS have made revenue collection a clear strategic priority as pressure on the fiscus continues to intensify. The problem that accompanies this is that scammers recognise the opportunity for crime that this creates,” Bhayla said.
“Scammers understand that many taxpayers are already anxious about unresolved compliance issues or outstanding liabilities. A fake ‘settlement notification’ therefore becomes far more believable in an environment where SARS itself is taking a stronger approach to enforcement.”
He added that taxpayers must remain vigilant and verify any correspondence through official SARS channels before taking action.
“Taxpayers who receive threatening correspondence referencing legal action or ‘immediate’ payment demands may react before properly verifying the communication. In many cases, fear unfortunately overrides caution.
“At the same time, some taxpayers have become so accustomed to scam communications that they now ignore legitimate SARS notices altogether, creating a separate compliance risk entirely. Every SARS communication should therefore be treated seriously but independently verified before any action is taken.”
He said the revenue service’s scam communications often contain warning signs such as suspicious links, unofficial payment channels, urgent or immediate payment deadlines, requests for banking information, or email domains designed to imitate SARS branding.
SARS and tax experts recommend the following precautions:
[email protected]
IOL Business
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