Millions of Americans were told relief was coming.
They’re still waiting.
As rumors explode across social media and inboxes fill with “claim your $2,000 now” messages, families are clinging to hope – and walking straight into danger. The promised tariff-funded payout remains stalled in
Washington, and experts warn the real threat isn’t missed money, but the scams circl… Continues…
Donald Trump’s proposed “tariff dividend” ignited huge expectations: up to $2,000 for lower- and middle-income Americans, funded by tariff revenue and framed as a refund for overpaid taxes on imported goods. But without a bill passed by
Congress, it remains only a political idea, not a legal entitlement. No federal agency can send those checks, and no one can legitimately help you “apply” for them.
That vacuum has created the perfect storm for fraud. Fake portals, bogus “tariff refund” texts, and callers posing as IRS agents are preying on financial anxiety, demanding fees or bank details for money that does not exist.
The IRS has confirmed it has launched no special website, no sign‑up system, no early-access list. If Congress ever approves such payments
, the Treasury and IRS will announce it publicly – just as they did with pandemic stimulus checks. Until then, the safest move is simple: assume every $2,000 offer is a lie.