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Received bizarre IRS non-filing verification letter dated 02/27/2025 for 2025 taxes with tomorrow's date and suspicious website - identity theft concern?

I just got this weird letter from the IRS saying they received a request for verification of non-filing on March 1, 2025 (which is tomorrow!) for my 2025 tax return. The letter is from the Internal Revenue Service, United States Department of the Treasury in PHILADELPHIA, PA 19255-1498. The letter is dated 02-27-2025 and says "Information About the Request We Received: On February 28, 2025, we received a request for verification of non-filing of a tax return. As of the date of this letter, we have no record of a processed tax return for the tax period listed above." The tax period they're referring to is December, and it's for a 1040_SERIES return. This makes absolutely no sense. I haven't even filed for 2025 yet because we're still in the filing season. I don't understand how they could receive a request dated for yesterday (February 28), and why anyone would be requesting verification that I haven't filed. The letter says "If you have any questions, you can call 800-829-1040" but I wanted to check here first. Is this some kind of scam? The website at the bottom says "sa.www4.irs.gov" which seems weird to me - shouldn't it just be irs.gov? Has anyone seen something like this before? EVERY SINGLE YEAR there's some kind of issue with my taxes and I'm so tired of this nonsense. Why would someone be requesting verification of my non-filing status? Should I be worried about identity theft?

Zainab Ibrahim

The letter you received is a Verification of Non-Filing letter, which confirms the IRS has no record of a tax return being filed for a specific year. The future date is definitely a red flag - the IRS doesn't issue letters with future dates. Some possibilities: 1. This could be a printing error from the IRS (they do make mistakes) 2. It could be a scam letter trying to get your information 3. Someone might have requested verification of your non-filing status (often needed for financial aid, mortgage applications, etc.) First, verify if this is legitimate. Call the IRS at 800-829-1040 to confirm if they sent this letter. Don't use the number on the letter itself if you suspect it's fraudulent. Second, check if anyone in your household might have requested this for legitimate reasons (student loans, mortgage application, etc.) Finally, monitor your credit reports for any suspicious activity since this could potentially indicate identity theft.

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Miguel Castro

Thanks for this information. I did call the number on the letter and got the actual IRS so I guess that part is legit. I'm not doing any loans or applications right now so that's what confuses me.

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21d

Connor O'Neill

I had something similar last year. The date was off by like 6 months. Turns out it was just a typo in their system.

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18d

LunarEclipse

I work with these letters sometimes. The IRS systems are notorious for date errors. As long as you called and confirmed it's legitimate, it's probably just their system glitching.

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17d

Yara Khalil

could be identity theft. someone might be trying to file a return in your name or something. definatley keep an eye on this.

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16d

Keisha Brown

Anyone can request verification of non-filing for someone else. That's the scary part. I'd be checking my credit reports ASAP.

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15d

Paolo Esposito

I stopped trying to figure out IRS stuff on my own and just used taxr.ai to analyze all my tax documents and transcripts. It actually explained that these verification letters can be requested by third parties like schools, lenders, etc., and the future date thing is definitely a system error. The tool literally highlighted the issue and explained what it meant as soon as I uploaded the letter. Saved me hours of anxiety and research. https://taxr.ai

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Amina Toure

This sounds interesting. What exactly does taxr do? Is it just for reading IRS letters or does it do more?

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19d

Paolo Esposito

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18d

Oliver Weber

Do they need all ur personal info to use it? Not sure I want to share my tax docs with some random site tbh

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16d

Paolo Esposito

You just upload what you want analyzed. Nothing gets stored permanently, and the site is really secure. I was hesitant at first too but my tax situation was so complicated and I was desperate. Best decision ever. It's like having a tax pro explain everything without the $$$ hourly fees.

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15d

Amina Toure

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15d

FireflyDreams

After wasting like 6 hours trying to reach the IRS about a similar letter, I tried using Claimyr.com and got an IRS agent on the phone in less than 30 minutes. The agent told me these letters with future dates happen when there's a system glitch but the content of the letter is usually still valid. Honestly saved my sanity and was worth every penny to finally get an actual answer from a human instead of all the automated BS.

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Natasha Kuznetsova

wait what is this Claimyr thing? does it actually work? ive been trying to talk to someone at the IRS for months

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17d

FireflyDreams

Yeah it actually connects you with an IRS agent on the phone. I was skeptical at first but I was desperate after being on hold for hours and getting disconnected TWICE. The service basically waits on hold for you and calls you back when an agent is about to pick up. Talking to a real person solved my issue in 10 minutes when I'd been stressing for weeks.

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16d

Javier Morales

This seems fishy. How does this even work?

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15d

FireflyDreams

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15d

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15d

Javier Morales

I just tried it and actually spoke to someone at the IRS for the first time in 3 months. Ridiculously effective.

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15d

Malik Thompson

Here's the original text from your letter: "On March 3, 2026, we received a request for verification of non-filing of a tax return. As of the date of this letter, we have no record of a processed tax return for the tax period listed above." This is DEFINITELY weird with the future date, but the letter itself looks like a standard verification of non-filing. These are usually requested for financial aid, housing assistance, or sometimes during audits. Someone definitely requested this for a reason. I would be concerned about potential identity theft.

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Miguel Castro

That's exactly what it says! I'm freaking out because I didn't request this and am not applying for any financial aid or loans right now.

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15d

Isabella Ferreira

You should check with any family members. Sometimes colleges request these for financial aid applications without telling the parents specifically what forms they're requesting.

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Miguel Castro

I live alone and don't have kids in college. That's why this is so bizarre to me.

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15d

CosmicVoyager

Don't panic. The IRS's computer systems are ancient and mess up dates constantly. I've seen letters dated from 1980, 2099, and everything in between. The fact that it's specifically one day in the future suggests it's just a system error where some date field incremented incorrectly.

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Ravi Kapoor

CONTACT THE IRS ASAP!!! This happened to my brother and it turned out someone was trying to file a fraudulent return in his name to claim a refund. The scammer requested the verification letter to confirm they could proceed with their fraud. Don't ignore this!!!

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Freya Nielsen

omg that's terrifying. what ended up happening with your brother's situation?

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15d

Ravi Kapoor

He had to file an identity theft affidavit (Form 14039) with the IRS. They gave him an Identity Protection PIN for future filings and eventually sorted it out, but it took like 8 months to get his actual refund. Total nightmare.

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15d

Omar Mahmoud

This ⬆️ freeze your credit reports NOW. Experian, Equifax, and TransUnion. Do it today.

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Chloe Harris

Check the physical characteristics of the letter. IRS letters typically have a specific feel to the paper and specific fonts. If anything seems off, it could be a sophisticated phishing attempt. The future date is suspicious. Does the tracking number on the letter start with specific digits like a normal IRS letter? What address did it tell you to respond to?

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Miguel Castro

The letter looks very official, it has all the IRS letterhead and everything. The paper feels like normal IRS mail I've gotten before. It doesn't ask me to respond anywhere which is part of why I'm confused.

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15d

Chloe Harris

If it doesn't ask for any action, that's actually a good sign. Scammers always want you to DO something (call a fake number, mail something, etc). This might just be an informational notice with a system date error.

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15d

Diego Vargas

Sounds like it could be a FAFSA verification issue. Even if you're not applying for financial aid, someone might have listed you as a parent or spouse on their FAFSA and now verification is being requested. Has anyone asked for your tax info recently for any kind of application?

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Miguel Castro

No, that's what's so weird! I'm not married and don't have kids in college, so I can't think of any reason why anyone would need verification of my non-filing.

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15d

NeonNinja

I'm an enrolled agent and I see these verification letters all the time. The date issue is definitely a system error - IRS computers are running on COBOL programming from the 60s and 70s. As for who requested it, many government agencies can request verification directly without the taxpayer's knowledge - think state benefits departments, housing authorities, SSA, etc. If you've applied for any government benefits in the last few months, that could be the source.

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Miguel Castro

I did apply for mortgage pre-approval about 2 months ago. Could that be related? The lender didn't mention anything about requesting IRS documents though.

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15d

NeonNinja

100% yes. Mortgage lenders frequently request verification of non-filing directly from the IRS, especially if you told them you weren't required to file for a particular year. Mystery solved! This is normal procedure for mortgage underwriting.

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Miguel Castro

Oh thank goodness! That's such a relief. I wish they had mentioned they were going to do this though.

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Anastasia Popov

It's probably buried somewhere in the 500 pages of disclosures you signed for the pre-approval 😂

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15d

Sean Murphy

I had this EXACT problem last year. Turned out my ex-spouse was trying to claim our child as a dependent and needed to prove I hadn't filed yet. Check if you have any contentious relationships with people who might benefit from information about your tax filing status.

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Zara Khan

imma be real with you, the IRS makes it IMPOSSIBLE to figure out what's going on. i gave up trying to understand my transcript codes and tax notices. if your brain hurts try taxr.ai it basically translated all my tax gibberish and told me exactly what was going on. IRS letters with system errors are pretty common apparently

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Luca Ferrari

Does this actually work? I hate trying to decode these stupid IRS letters.

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15d

Zara Khan

Dude YES. I had a cp2000 notice that made zero sense to me but taxr broke it down step by step and told me exactly how to respond. Saved me like $1200 because I would have just paid it otherwise.

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15d

Nia Davis

THIS IS A PHISHING SCAM!!! The IRS NEVER issues letters with future dates. DO NOT call any phone numbers on that letter. Look up the official IRS number yourself and call them. Also check the return address CAREFULLY.

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Mateo Martinez

Actually the IRS does sometimes have date errors. I've worked with IRS notices for 15 years as a tax preparer. Their systems mess up dates all the time, especially when batch processing runs over midnight or during daylight savings changes.

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15d

Nia Davis

Oh really? Didnt know that, always thought they were super precise with those things. Still should verify directly with IRS tho just to be safe.

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Mateo Martinez

100% agree on verifying directly with the IRS using a number you look up yourself, not from the letter. That's always the safe approach.

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15d

QuantumQueen

Yo, after spending 4 days trying to get someone at the IRS on the phone about my transcript, I finally used Claimyr.com and got through in like 40 minutes. Apparently these verification of non-filing letters can be requested by a ton of different entities - mortgage companies, schools for FAFSA, even court proceedings. The date being wrong is just classic IRS computer issues. Nothing to worry about unless you start getting more weird mail.

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Aisha Rahman

how much does claimyr cost? been trying to reach IRS for WEEKS

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15d

QuantumQueen

Honestly, whatever it costs was worth every penny. I was going insane trying to get through. My refund was held up for some stupid reason and after one call it got released. Literally saved me thousands by getting my own money back to me.

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15d

Aisha Rahman

just checked their site. not cheap but honestly if it gets me off hold hell i might do it. thx!

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15d

Ethan Wilson

If nobody in your immediate family requested this, you should lock your credit reports IMMEDIATELY and file a complaint with the FTC at identitytheft.gov - this is a classic first step in tax identity theft. Someone is verifying you haven't filed yet so they can file a fraudulent return in your name.

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Yuki Sato

Ok i had this EXACT thing happen to me three years ago. Ended up being my college age kid had listed me on their FAFSA and the financial aid office requested verification directly from the IRS. They didn't even tell my kid they were doing this, so it was a total mystery to me for weeks until we figured it out. Ask anyone who might have included your info on applications.

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Miguel Castro

I don't have any kids though... that's what makes this so weird. I'm not connected to anyone who would be applying for financial aid.

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15d

Yuki Sato

Any chance someone could have used your info by mistake? Like if you have a common name? Or maybe an identity theft issue...

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15d

Carmen Flores

The IRS issued a statement last month about a printing error affecting certain verification notices where the dates were showing as one day in the future. It's a known issue they're working to fix. Nothing to worry about.

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Andre Dubois

do you have a link to this statement? I can't find it anywhere and I got a similar letter

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15d

Carmen Flores

Hmm I thought I saw it on their newsroom page but now I can't find it either. Maybe call and ask specifically about the date error issue?

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15d

CyberSamurai

Put your worries aside and try taxr.ai - it literally saved my sanity when dealing with an IRS notice that made no sense. You just upload your document and it tells you exactly what it means, who might have requested it, and what (if anything) you need to do. Way better than waiting on hold for hours or trying to Google random tax codes.

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Zoe Alexopoulos

Judging by the Philadelphia address, this is coming from the legitimate IRS service center. The date inconsistency is concerning but not unprecedented - their systems famously have date issues. What does your tax transcript show when you pull it from irs.gov? That would confirm if this is a legitimate IRS communication.

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Miguel Castro

I tried pulling my transcript but the IRS website keeps giving me errors. Says something about information not matching their records.

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15d

Zoe Alexopoulos

That's concerning. If you can't access your own transcript, it could mean someone has already tampered with your tax account. I strongly recommend calling the IRS Identity Protection Specialized Unit at 800-908-4490.

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15d

Jamal Carter

FYI, the IRS website for transcript access is notoriously unreliable. I can't get in half the time and nothing's wrong with my account. Don't panic yet.

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15d

Mei Liu

You need to find out who requested this verification. Most common requestors: - Mortgage lenders - Student loan servicers - Financial aid offices - State benefit programs (SNAP, Medicaid, etc) - Court-ordered proceedings (child support, bankruptcy) Call the IRS at 800-829-1040 and specifically ask who requested the verification. They should be able to tell you.

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