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HIGH government impersonation Share

A caller claims to be the CRA and threatens arrest for unpaid tax — pay by gift card or e-Transfer now

A caller says they're from the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) and you owe back taxes. They threaten arrest by RCMP, deportation, or a warrant unless you pay right now — usually by gift card (iTunes, Google Play), Bitcoin at an ATM, or Interac e-Transfer. The CRA never demands payment this way.

Also known as: CRA phone scam, Canada Revenue Agency scam call, fake RCMP arrest warrant call, tax fraud phone scam Canada

What to do right now

  1. 1 Hang up. The CRA will never threaten arrest, demand gift cards, or ask for Bitcoin — those are 100% scam markers
  2. 2 If you're unsure whether the CRA actually contacted you, log into CRA My Account at https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency and check for any real notices — the real CRA communicates in writing there first
  3. 3 If you already paid by gift card: keep the card and receipt, call the gift card issuer's fraud line (Apple/Google) — refunds occasionally succeed if reported within hours
  4. 4 If you already sent Interac e-Transfer: call your bank immediately — if the recipient hasn't accepted it yet, it can sometimes be cancelled
  5. 5 Report to the Canadian Anti-Fraud Centre at https://antifraudcentre-centreantifraude.ca or call 1-888-495-8501.

Red flags

  • The caller threatens immediate arrest, deportation, or RCMP involvement over unpaid tax — CRA collections never do this
  • You are told to pay by iTunes, Google Play, Steam, or other gift cards — no legitimate government agency has ever accepted gift cards
  • You are told to pay by Interac e-Transfer to a personal email address, or by Bitcoin at a nearby ATM
  • The caller ID shows an Ottawa number (613 area) or a spoofed CRA line — spoofing is trivial and proves nothing
  • You are told to stay on the phone and not tell anyone — including your bank teller — while the payment is being made
  • The caller has some of your personal details (name, address) — usually from data breaches, not from the CRA

Known variants

  • 'Social Insurance Number suspended' variant: caller pretends to be from Service Canada, says your SIN has been 'compromised or suspended' due to fraudulent use, and asks you to transfer money to a 'safe account' or share personal details to 'verify'. Service Canada does not suspend SINs by phone.

    Last seen: 6/20/2026

Sources

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