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🦠 MalwareMicrosoft Security·76d ago

When tax season becomes cyberattack season: Phishing and malware campaigns using tax-related lures

In this article A wide range of tax-themed campaigns How to protect users and organization against tax-themed campaigns Microsoft Defender detection and hunting guidance Indicators of compromise During tax season, threat actors reliably take advantage of the urgency and familiarity of time-sensitive emails, including refund notices, payroll forms, filing reminders, and requests from tax professionals, to trick targets into opening malicious attachments, scanning QR codes, or following multi-step link chains. Every year, there is an observable uptick in tax-themed campaigns as Tax Day (April 15) approaches in the United States, and this year is no different. In recent months, Microsoft Threat Intelligence identified email campaigns using lures around W-2, tax forms, or similar themes, or posing as government tax agencies, tax services firms, and relevant financial institutions. Many campaigns target individuals for personal and financial data theft, but others specifically target accountants and other professionals who handle sensitive documents, have access to financial data, and are accustomed to receiving tax-related emails during this period. Identified campaigns were designed to harvest credentials or deliver malware. Phishing-as-a-service (PhaaS) platforms continue to be prevalent, enabling highly convincing credential theft and multifactor authentication (MFA) bypass campaigns through tailored tax-themed social engineering lures, attachments, and phishing pages. In cases of malware delivery, we noted a continued trend of abusing legitimate remote monitoring and management tools (RMMs), which allow threat actors to maintain persistence on a compromised device or network, enable an alternative command-and-control method, or, in the case of hands-on-keyboard attacks, use as an interactive remote desktop session. INSIDE TYCOON 2FA How a leading AiTM phishing kit operated at scale › This blog details several of the campaigns observed by Microsoft Threat Intelligence in the past few months that leveraged the tax season for social engineering. By educating users about phishing lures, configuring essential email security settings, and defending against credential theft, individuals and organizations can defend against both this seasonal surge in phishing attacks and more broadly against many types of phishing attacks that we observe. A wide range of tax-themed campaigns CPA lures leading to Energy365 phishing kit In early February 2026, we observed a campaign that was delivering the Energy365 PhaaS phishing kit and used tax and Certified Public Accountant (CPA) lures throughout the attack chain. This campaign stood out due to its highly specific lure customization, in contrast to other threat actors who use this popular phishing kit but employ generic lures. Other notable characteristics of this campaign include the involvement of multiple file formats such as Excel and OneNote, use of legitimate infrastructure such as OneDrive, and multiple rounds

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Originally published by Microsoft Security

Source: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/security/blog/2026/03/19/when-tax-season-becomes-cyberattack-season-phishing-and-malware-campaigns-using-tax-related-lures/

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