Quick answer
An identity verification link usually means the official system wants you to complete an identity-related step before the process can move forward more confidently.
What this means
The link is usually not random. It appears because the process needs more confidence that the person connected to the record is really the correct one. That can happen after mismatches, number changes, or other record checks.
Why this matters
Identity verification links create a lot of stress because users are worried about scams. That is a sensible concern. The safest response is to confirm that the request is official before you follow it.
What you can do next
- Check whether the verification request came through the correct official route.
- Save the wording and the date.
- Confirm that the link belongs to the right official process.
- Complete the official step only if you are confident it is authentic.
- Watch for later status changes after the verification step is done.
How to think about it
The link itself is less important than what it is trying to do. It is usually trying to confirm identity, which is why trust and route safety matter so much before you click anything.
Important things to remember
GrantCare will not pretend to be an identity-verification route. It can explain what the request usually means and how to judge whether the link appears trustworthy.
How GrantCare can help
GrantCare can help you compare identity verification links with official-request safety guides, failed verification pages, and number-change related guides.
Related help
Frequently asked questions
Does an identity verification link mean I was declined?
Not necessarily. It often means another identity step is needed before the process can move on.
Should I click every link that mentions identity verification?
No. Confirm that the request is official before acting.
Why would the system ask for this?
Usually because it wants more confidence that the record matches the correct person.
