Fake Tax Office Scams in Slovakia
Fraudsters impersonate Slovakia's Financial Administration with fake refund and arrears messages designed to steal banking logins or extract immediate payments.
Part of: Fake Tax Office Scams
Last reviewed: 1 June 2026
Fake tax-office scams in Slovakia trade on the authority of the Financial Administration (Financna sprava). Around filing and refund periods, fraudsters send emails and texts claiming the recipient is owed a refund or owes overdue tax, prompting them to click a link and enter banking or card details.
The messages are written in Slovak, reference real tax concepts, and use spoofed sender names to look authentic. The aim is to capture online-banking credentials or push the victim into an immediate payment to a criminal account.
How this scam works on Slovakia
A message claims the recipient has a refund waiting and must 'confirm their account' via a link, or warns that unpaid tax will trigger enforcement unless settled today. The link opens a replica of a Financna sprava page or a Slovak bank login that captures the credentials entered.
With those details and a real-time approval prompt, the criminals authorise transfers from the victim's account. Phone variants feature a caller posing as a tax officer quoting a plausible reference number and pressuring the victim to pay arrears immediately.
In Slovakia the scam exploits familiarity with electronic tax filing through the financial-administration portal, lending the fake refund and arrears notices a veneer of legitimacy.
Common red flags
- An email or SMS with a link to 'confirm your account' to receive a tax refund
- Threats of immediate enforcement for unpaid tax unless you act today
- A login page requesting full banking credentials and a real-time approval
- Sender details that do not match official Financna sprava channels
- Requests to pay tax arrears via card link, gift cards, or an unfamiliar account
- Urgent, threatening tone rather than the formal style of real tax letters
- Refund amounts or references that do not match your own tax records
How to protect yourself
- Never click links in tax messages — access the tax portal by typing the official address yourself
- Verify any claimed refund or debt by logging into your own tax account directly
- Confirm arrears by calling the Financial Administration on its official number
- Never enter banking credentials on a page reached via an email or SMS link
- Enable transaction alerts with your Slovak bank to catch unexpected transfers
- Report and delete suspicious tax messages instead of replying
How to report it
- Report tax-impersonation messages to the Financial Administration via its official channel
- File a report with the Slovak Police via 158 if you lost money or shared credentials
- Notify your bank immediately to freeze the account and dispute any transfers
Frequently asked questions
Does the Slovak tax office send links to claim a refund?
No. The Financial Administration processes refunds through your registered account and official channels, not through links in unsolicited emails or texts asking you to confirm bank details. Any such message should be treated as phishing — log into your tax account directly to check your real status.