Official Tracker
IRS Where's My Refund
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
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Direct Answer
To check where's my refund, visit irs.gov/refunds, the official IRS refund status tool. You need your SSN or ITIN, filing status, and the exact refund amount from your return. E-filed returns with direct deposit are typically processed within 21 days. Paper returns take 6–8 weeks.
Key Takeaways
How to Check Your Federal IRS Refund
Visit irs.gov/refunds and use the "Where's My Refund?" tool. No account login is required.
What You Need
- Your Social Security Number (SSN) or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN)
- Your filing status (Single, Married Filing Jointly, etc.)
- The exact whole-dollar refund amount shown on your return
When to Check
Allow 24 hours after e-filing before checking. For paper returns, allow 4 weeks. The IRS updates the tracker once per day, typically overnight — checking multiple times per day will not show different results.
IRS2Go Mobile App
The IRS also offers the IRS2Go app (iOS and Android) which provides the same refund status information as the web tool.
Federal Refund Processing Times
Processing times depend on how you filed and how you chose to receive your refund. E-filing with direct deposit is the fastest option.
Returns claiming the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) cannot be issued before mid-February by law under the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act, regardless of when the return was filed or accepted.
If the IRS needs additional information to process your return — for example, to verify your identity or reconcile a discrepancy — processing time will be extended and you will receive a notice by mail.
Common Federal Refund Delay Reasons
The most frequent causes of IRS refund delays include:
- Identity verification: The IRS may send a 5071C, 6331C, or 5447C letter asking you to verify your identity online or by phone. Responding promptly is critical. The IRS Letter 5071C guide covers the exact steps, the online verification portal link, and the timeline for resuming refund processing after verification.
- EITC or ACTC claims: These credits are subject to mandatory holds under the PATH Act through mid-February.
- Math errors or missing information: The IRS corrects math errors automatically but will send a notice explaining the adjustment.
- Offset for federal or state debts: Refunds may be applied to unpaid back taxes, past-due child support, state income taxes, and other qualifying government debts. Note: Federal student loan tax refund offsets (Treasury Offset Program) are currently paused by the Department of Education through approximately July 2026 while repayment reforms are implemented under the OBBBA. Borrowers in default are not having 2026 tax refunds seized for student loans during this pause period.
- Amended return filed after original: If an amended return (Form 1040-X) was filed, processing can take up to 20 weeks. Track it separately using the IRS Where's My Amended Return tool. It is not shown in this tracker.
- Bank account issues: If direct deposit fails (wrong routing/account number), the IRS will mail a paper check, adding several weeks. If the tracker shows "Refund Sent" but you have not received the deposit or check, see our guide on what to do when your refund was sent but not received for the steps to trace and recover the payment.
E-File vs. Paper Return Comparison
Choosing e-file and direct deposit is consistently the fastest path to receiving your federal refund. The IRS strongly recommends e-filing.
E-File + Direct Deposit: Fastest available option. Most refunds issued within 21 days. Real-time acknowledgment of IRS acceptance within minutes of submission. Online status available within 24 hours.
Paper Return + Direct Deposit: Return must be manually processed, which takes 6–8 weeks. Direct deposit still saves approximately one week vs. a paper check once processing is complete.
Paper Return + Paper Check: Slowest option. Manual processing (6–8 weeks) plus check printing and mailing adds additional time.
Processing Time Summary
| Filing Method | Typical Processing Time | Speed |
|---|---|---|
| E-File + Direct Deposit | Within 21 days | Fast |
| E-File + Paper Check | Within 21 days (check adds ~1 week) | Fast |
| Paper Return + Direct Deposit | 6–8 weeks | Slower |
| Paper Return + Paper Check | 6–8 weeks (check adds ~1 week) | Slower |
| Amended Return (1040-X) | Up to 20 weeks | Slower |
| EITC / ACTC Returns | After Feb 15 by law (PATH Act) | Slower |
IRS Refund Processing Stages
Every federal return moves through three IRS tracking stages before the refund is issued: Return Received, Refund Approved, and Refund Sent. The "Where's My Refund" tool displays which stage your return is in. If your status has been "Return Received" for more than 21 days without advancing to "Refund Approved," your return may be under manual review or selected for identity verification. See our IRS Refund Processing Stages guide for what each status means, how long each stage typically takes, and what triggers a hold between stages.
Practitioner Note · Nausheen Shahid, LMN Tax Inc · 22+ Years Experience
"At LMN Tax Inc, the most common federal refund delay we help clients resolve involves identity verification letters. The IRS sends 5071C letters requesting identity confirmation, but they often arrive weeks after e-filing and can be missed or misidentified as junk mail. If your refund is stuck in 'processing' past the 21-day window, call our office — we can help you respond to IRS notices efficiently and get your refund moving."
— Nausheen Shahid, Founder, LMN Tax Inc
Real-World Federal Refund Scenario
Jerome, married filing jointly, claimed ACTC, e-filed, TY 2024: Jerome and his wife e-filed their 2024 return on January 30, 2025 and claimed the Additional Child Tax Credit for two qualifying children. Their expected refund was $5,640. Jerome checked Where's My Refund on February 10 and saw "Still Being Processed."
Jerome called 800-829-1040 on February 12. The agent confirmed a PATH Act hold was in place and no action was needed. On February 20, the Where's My Refund status updated to "Refund Approved" with a deposit date of February 25. The deposit arrived February 25, 26 days after filing.
Jerome's timeline is consistent with the PATH Act requirement: returns claiming EITC or ACTC cannot have refunds issued before mid-February by law, regardless of filing date. Filing in January still gives priority processing position once the hold window clears. Calls made before mid-February on PATH Act returns provide no additional information and do not change the release date.
This is a realistic example based on verified IRS PATH Act rules. It is not a specific taxpayer case. Dollar amounts and timelines are illustrative.
When Federal Refund Tracking Does Not Apply
- Amended return status: Where's My Refund tracks original returns only. If you filed Form 1040-X (amended return), use the IRS Where's My Amended Return tool at irs.gov/filing/wheres-my-amended-return. Amended returns take up to 20 weeks and are tracked separately.
- Paper return filed by mail: Paper returns do not appear in Where's My Refund until approximately 4 weeks after the IRS receives the return. A "not found" status during that window does not indicate a lost return.
- Refund offset applied: If your refund was applied to an outstanding debt (back taxes, child support, defaulted student loans), the amount you receive may be less than expected. A notice from the Bureau of the Fiscal Service will arrive explaining the offset. Where's My Refund shows the original refund amount, not the net amount after offset. The Bureau of the Fiscal Service applies debts in priority order. Contact the Bureau or your state agency for dispute options.
- Identity verification hold in place: If you received Letter 5071C or 4883C, the refund is on hold until you complete identity verification. Processing resumes only after successful verification — waiting longer or calling the main line does not release the hold.
- State refunds: Where's My Refund (IRS) tracks federal refunds only. State income tax refunds are processed on entirely separate state systems with independent timelines. Use your state revenue department's tracker for state refund status.
Related Refund Resources
- Why Is My Tax Refund Delayed? — the 12 most common IRS hold triggers and what to do about each one
- IRS "Still Being Processed": What It Means — what this status means and when to call
- When to Call the IRS About Your Refund — IRS contact guidance and wait windows
- IRS Refund Processing Stages — all three WMR stages explained
- IRS Refund Timeline — full processing schedule and deposit date expectations
- Refund Date Estimator — estimate your refund arrival date based on filing date and delivery method
- State Tax Refund Processing Times — compare processing windows across all 50 states
- IRS Refund Approved But Not Sent — what to do when WMR shows approved but money has not arrived
- Refund Sent But Not Received — trace a missing direct deposit or paper check
- IRS Letter 5071C — identity verification letter: steps and timeline
- Tax Refund Offset Guide — why your refund was reduced and what to do
- Where's My Amended Return? — track Form 1040-X status separately from WMR
Frequently Asked Questions: Federal / IRS Tax Refund
Next Step
Check your federal refund status at IRS.gov/refunds, then use our refund date estimator to project your exact deposit date from your e-file acceptance date. For a full 50-state comparison of processing windows, see our state tax refund processing times guide. For more detail on causes of delay and what each refund stage means, see the IRS Refund Processing Stages guide and the IRS Refund Timeline guide. If your refund shows "Sent" but has not arrived, see the Refund Sent But Not Received guide.
Sources & Editorial Disclosure
IRS Where's My Refund · IRS Publication 2043 – IRS Refund Information Guidelines · IRS Topic No. 152 – Refund Information · PATH Act Information – IRS · Last reviewed: February 2026 · Authored by Munib Ur Rehman · Reviewed by Nausheen Shahid, LMN Tax Inc. Not affiliated with the IRS or any state tax authority. For informational purposes only.