From Medicare open enrollment to end of the year taxes to the holidays, it's the time when imposters crawl out of the woodwork. Medicare health insurance is difficult enough to understand, now seniors have to deal with scammers selling fake plans. And what about the IRS scams? That's up next. But first, pay close attention websites selling children toys and other goods at jacked up prices. Only shop at online stores you trust.
If a telemarketer calls you asking questions about your Medicare insurance plan and the inquiry confuses you or it doesn't make sense, just hang up and call your health insurance plan's customer service department or your agent. You don't have to put up with nonsense from a telemarketer. Watch out for these scams:
Thousands of seniors have lost millions of dollars and their personal information to tax scams. Imposters and scammers use the regular mail, telephone, or email to set up individuals, businesses, payroll and tax professionals.
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) does not start contact with taxpayers by email, text messages or social media channels to request personal or financial information. Other ways to recognize the signs of an IRS scam.
While you're scouring the Web for holiday deals, scammers work hard to steal your data and hard-earned cash. The top online scams:
Gift cards, gift card exchanges, counterfeit name-brand goods, email holiday card, websites offering coupon and promotional discount codes, and the buy one online and pick up a second one for free in the store.
Be alert and don't fall for a scam. I'd rather hang up on a legitimate caller than talk with a scammer.
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Carol Marak, aging advocate, Seniorcare.com. She's earned a Certificate in the Fundamentals of Gerontology from UC Davis, School of Gerontology.