It's Tax Season. Do You Know Where Your Mail Is?
It's Tax Season. Do You Know Where Your Mail Is? · Credit.com

During the holiday season a missed or stolen package can be aggravating, which is doubtless why you eagerly watched for deliveries all December, calling the nanosecond you suspected a problem. Unfortunately, many employers don't send tracking numbers when the packet of vital documents marked "Important Tax Information Enclosed" hits the mail destined for your home address.

We receive some of the most sensitive, potentially damaging mail deliveries of the year during these post-holiday months, and a wayward envelope during tax season can wreak immense financial havoc. Your employer W-2s and 1099s, annual statements from banks, brokerage firms and credit card companies—all needed for tax preparation—are headed your way. And tax documents aren't the only missives you will be receiving. There are explanations of health benefits, membership renewals, new healthcare credentials and other service-related roundups that include essential facts about your life. Everything you spent and everything you donated; everything you do for your health, fun or profit; each investment, every gain and loss—all of that and more will be hitting your terrestrial and digital mailboxes in the coming weeks, and all of it is manna to identity thieves.

The crimes that can be committed are almost too numerous to list here. There's the healthcare grab, where someone pretends to be you to acquire diagnoses, cures or prescriptions in your name, which can permanently change your health record and future medical decisions in potentially life-threatening ways. Identity thieves may use your annual statements—and other information that travels by mail this time of year—to either worm into your credit files or create new ones. A recent story out of Miami involved more than 1,000 student debit card accounts that were allegedly used for collecting tax refunds from fraudulently filed tax returns. One student alone allegedly grabbed more than $50,000. The windfalls for crimes of this nature are huge, and often go undetected for a long time.

Identity thieves know you can't possibly keep track of the entire paper trail that's in transit to your door (virtual or otherwise), and they are always crawling through the cracks and crevasses of your life to grab as much of your sensitive personal information as they can.

So what should you be looking for? It may be a prompt from TurboTax or an email from American Express, or you may have to be alert and sensitive as to what hasn't arrived. While my best advice is to stay on top of your mail—you are in the best position to know what's supposed to come this time of year, so be on the lookout—there are strategies that can make you less of a target.