# What Happens After You File Your Tax Return

Following the submission of a tax return, the document enters a highly automated Internal Revenue Service (IRS) pipeline designed to screen for math errors, match reported income against employer records, and filter for identity fraud before authorizing a payout. For most electronic filers utilizing direct deposit without discrepancies, this invisible backend process results in a finalized refund within 21 days. However, legally mandated fraud checks, mismatched third-party data, and complex manual reviews can frequently extend this timeline by several weeks or even months.

## The Initial Submission: Acceptance Versus Approval

Filing a tax return often feels like a black box to the average filer. A document is submitted electronically, and shortly after, tax preparation software provides a notification that the return was "accepted." A common misconception is that acceptance equates to an approved refund. In reality, acceptance is merely the first digital handshake in a much longer administrative sequence [cite: 1, 2].

When the IRS marks a federal tax return as accepted, it simply means the agency has successfully received the transmission and completed a rudimentary initial screening [cite: 1]. This early check looks for basic formatting issues, ensures the inclusion of required signatures, validates Social Security numbers, and confirms that a dependent has not already been claimed on another return [cite: 2]. An accepted return has officially entered the IRS processing system, but it has not been fully reviewed, and no refund has been authorized [cite: 1, 2].

Approval is the critical secondary milestone. Approval happens only after the IRS has fully processed the return, verified the underlying income, and confirmed that the mathematical calculations are accurate. Once approved, the IRS officially authorizes the release of the funds and generates a scheduled payment date [cite: 1, 2, 3].

### Expected Processing Timelines

The method utilized to file the return and the chosen method of disbursement are the primary drivers of processing speed. The IRS has increasingly pushed taxpayers toward digital adoption, going so far as to initiate the phase-out of paper tax refund checks under recent executive orders aimed at modernizing payments [cite: 4]. 

The following table summarizes the standard processing expectations based on filing and payment methods:

| Filing Method | Payment Method | Typical Processing Timeframe |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **Electronic (E-file)** | Direct Deposit | Approximately 21 calendar days [cite: 5, 6, 7] |
| **Electronic (E-file)** | Paper Check | 3 to 4 weeks (accounting for check printing and mail transit) [cite: 8, 9, 10] |
| **Paper Return** | Direct Deposit | 4 to 8 weeks (requires manual transcription) [cite: 3, 5, 10] |
| **Paper Return** | Paper Check | 6 to 8 weeks, frequently longer during peak season [cite: 3, 5, 7] |
| **Amended Return (1040-X)**| Direct Deposit / Check | Up to 16 weeks, though administrative backlogs frequently push this longer [cite: 11, 12, 13] |

*Note: These are baseline estimates. Returns claiming specific credits or triggering fraud filters will fall outside these standard windows.*

## Inside the IRS Processing Pipeline

Once a return is accepted, it does not simply wait in a physical or digital line to be read by an IRS agent. Over 94% of individual tax returns are filed electronically, feeding directly into massive, automated databases [cite: 14, 15]. 

While the public-facing refund trackers show a simple progression, the internal IRS workflow is highly complex. The backend systems are continuously running advanced analytics to cross-reference taxpayer claims against billions of third-party data points.

### The Public Tracker vs. Backend Operations

Taxpayers tracking their returns often experience frustration when their status sits on "Return Received" for weeks without moving. Understanding the intense backend processing that occurs during this seemingly stagnant phase demystifies the delay. While the public tracker displays only three basic stages, the return undergoes complex algorithmic fraud scoring and third-party data matching before a refund is ever approved [cite: 1, 3, 6, 16, 17, 18, 19].

| Public "Where's My Refund" Status | Simultaneous IRS Backend Operations |
| :--- | :--- |
| **Stage 1: Return Received** | **Validation:** The return passes basic syntax and SSN formatting checks.<br>**Data Mining & Scoring:** The return is ingested into the Return Review Program (RRP) for predictive fraud scoring.<br>**Data Matching:** W-2 and 1099 figures on the return are matched against employer documents submitted to the IRS.<br>**Exception Queueing:** If anomalies are detected, the return is suspended and routed to an examiner for manual review. |
| **Stage 2: Refund Approved** | **Master File Authorization:** The IRS finalizes the review, clears the return from any holds, and authorizes the exact refund amount. A payment date is scheduled with the Treasury Department. |
| **Stage 3: Refund Sent** | **Disbursement:** The Treasury transmits the ACH direct deposit to the taxpayer's bank or issues a physical paper check to the postal service. |

### The Return Review Program (RRP) and Fraud Filters

The most critical step in the modern IRS pipeline is the Return Review Program (RRP). Historically, the IRS relied on an aging framework known as the Electronic Fraud Detection System (EFDS) to spot questionable refunds [cite: 18, 20]. Following reports that billions of dollars were being lost to paper and electronic tax fraud, the IRS sought to close the gap between its technological compliance competence and modern fraud schemes [cite: 18, 20]. 

The RRP was developed as a mission-critical, automated analytics system designed to detect anomalies, prevent identity theft, and stop fraudulent refunds before they are issued [cite: 18, 19, 20]. It acts as an in-line batch anomaly detection functionality, meaning it processes returns automatically without a user interface or manual input unless an anomaly triggers an alert [cite: 21].

The RRP assigns multiple risk scores to each return based on predictive analytics and historic fraud patterns [cite: 22, 23]. It executes several critical functions:
*   **Income Matching:** The system cross-references the wages and withholdings reported on the 1040 against the W-2 and 1099 forms submitted by employers and financial institutions [cite: 17, 24, 25]. 
*   **Dependent Verification:** A rules-based database checks dependents against Social Security Administration records and Department of Health and Human Services data [cite: 22].
*   **Identity Theft Characteristics:** The system looks for suspicious filing patterns, mismatched bank account names (Questionable Refund Program triggers), or signs that a return aligns with known characteristics of confirmed identity theft [cite: 18, 22, 23].

Between 2015 and 2017 alone, the RRP was credited with preventing the issuance of more than $6.51 billion in invalid refunds [cite: 19]. However, the system's effectiveness relies heavily on the timely receipt of third-party data. If an employer is late submitting W-2s, the RRP cannot verify the taxpayer's income. When the system lacks this verifying data, or if the numbers do not match perfectly, the return is flagged and suspended [cite: 24, 25]. A suspended return falls out of the automated pipeline and is queued for manual review by an IRS employee, which is the primary cause of extended processing times [cite: 2, 14, 17].

## Decoding the "Where's My Refund?" Tracker

To track the status of a tax refund, the most reliable and official method is the IRS's "Where's My Refund?" tool, available on IRS.gov or via the IRS2Go mobile application [cite: 6, 7, 9, 16]. The tool typically becomes available 24 hours after a current-year electronic return is filed, three to four days after a prior-year electronic return is filed, and roughly four weeks after a paper return is mailed [cite: 6, 11, 26].

Accessing the tracker requires three specific pieces of information: the filer's Social Security number or Individual Taxpayer Identification Number (ITIN), the exact filing status used on the return, and the exact whole-dollar amount of the expected refund [cite: 9, 11, 26, 27].

The tool is designed to display progress across three primary phases:
1.  **Return Received:** The IRS has successfully received the tax return and is actively processing it. No action is required from the taxpayer at this stage [cite: 3, 8]. 
2.  **Refund Approved:** The IRS has completed its backend review, verified the mathematical calculations, and officially authorized the refund amount. A personalized payment date is generated [cite: 3, 6, 8]. 
3.  **Refund Sent:** The IRS has directed the Treasury Department to transmit the funds to the taxpayer's financial institution for direct deposit, or a paper check has been mailed. Direct deposits generally post to bank accounts within one to five business days, depending on the receiving institution's clearing procedures [cite: 3, 6, 28]. 

The "Where's My Refund?" portal is updated only once per day, typically overnight between midnight and 6:00 a.m. Eastern time. Consequently, checking the tool multiple times a day will not yield new information [cite: 6, 9, 26].

### The Difference Between "Being Processed" and "Still Being Processed"

When a refund takes longer than the standard 21-day window, taxpayers closely monitor the tracker for updates. During this waiting period, subtle changes in the wording of the status message can indicate shifts in backend processing. The distinction between a return "being processed" and one "still being processed" is a common source of confusion.

| Status Message | Backend Meaning | Required Taxpayer Action |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| **"Your return is being processed."** | This is the standard, positive progression message. It indicates the return has passed initial acceptance and is moving normally through the automated pipeline toward final approval [cite: 29, 30, 31]. | None. Wait for the status to change to Approved. |
| **"Your tax return is still being processed."** | The return has likely fallen out of the automated 21-day window. It has been queued for a manual review, requires income verification, or involves complex credits requiring a system update. A refund date cannot be assigned yet [cite: 3, 6, 30, 32]. | None, unless a physical letter is received in the mail requesting specific action. |

Seeing the "still being processed" message does not automatically indicate that a taxpayer is being audited or has made a severe error [cite: 3, 32]. This status frequently appears during high-volume weeks, when third-party software glitches cause data mismatches, or when a taxpayer claims specific, highly scrutinized tax credits [cite: 31, 32].

## Major Causes of Tax Refund Delays

When a return is suspended in processing limbo, it is generally due to one of a few common legislative or administrative triggers designed to prevent fraud and ensure accuracy.

### The PATH Act Hold (Mid-February Delay)

For millions of lower- and middle-income families, a processing delay is actually mandated by federal law. If a taxpayer claims the **Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC)** or the **Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC)**, the IRS is legally forbidden from issuing the refund early in the tax season [cite: 5, 6, 28, 33]. 

Under the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act of 2015, the IRS must hold the entire refund for returns claiming these specific credits until at least mid-February (traditionally February 15) [cite: 33, 34, 35]. Before the enactment of this law, the IRS often issued refunds early in the filing season, before employers had submitted matching W-2 wage information [cite: 24, 33]. This timing gap allowed fraudulent actors to file fake returns using stolen identities and claim large, refundable credits before the IRS could verify the nonexistent income [cite: 24, 28, 33]. 

The PATH Act closed this loophole by giving the IRS additional time to verify income and eligibility before releasing funds [cite: 28, 33, 36]. The law applies to the entire refund amount, not just the portion associated with the credit [cite: 28, 33].

Even if an individual files on the very first day the IRS opens for the season, the public tracker will remain on the "Return Received" stage with a PATH Act notification message until the legal hold officially lifts [cite: 6, 28]. Once the February 15 date passes, the IRS begins running massive processing batches. Historically, early PATH Act filers who utilize direct deposit and have no other errors on their returns begin seeing updates to their trackers around February 21, with funds arriving in bank accounts by the final week of February or the first week of March [cite: 10, 26, 28, 35, 36].

### Identity Verification Letters (5071C and 4883C)

As identity theft has grown increasingly sophisticated, the IRS has aggressively tightened its security filters. If the automated Return Review Program suspects that a return may have been filed by an unauthorized actor using a legitimate taxpayer's Social Security number, processing will instantly freeze [cite: 37, 38, 39]. The IRS will not process the return or issue the refund until the actual taxpayer proves their identity [cite: 40, 41].

When this occurs, the IRS initiates contact by mailing a physical identity verification letter. The agency does not initiate these requests via email or unsolicited phone calls [cite: 38]. The specific letter received dictates the required response mechanism:

*   **Letter 5071C:** This is the most widely issued verification letter. It allows the taxpayer to verify their identity online through the secure ID.me portal or via phone. Using the online option is the fastest method to resolve the hold [cite: 38, 41, 42, 43, 44]. Taxpayers must create or log into an ID.me account, which adheres to strict NIST 800-63-3 IAL2+Liveness standards, requiring the upload of government documents and a video selfie [cite: 42]. 
*   **Letter 4883C:** This letter is issued when online verification is not an option. It strictly requires the taxpayer to verify their identity over the phone by calling the IRS Taxpayer Protection Program toll-free line [cite: 39, 40, 41, 44].
*   **Letter 5447C:** This letter is tailored for international taxpayers or those with foreign addresses, providing specialized phone and mail options for verification [cite: 40, 41].
*   **Letter 5747C:** Used sparingly, this letter requires the taxpayer to schedule an appointment and visit a local Taxpayer Assistance Center to verify their identity in person [cite: 40, 41, 45].

When completing the verification process, taxpayers must have copies of their prior-year tax return, the current-year tax return, supporting documents (like W-2s or 1099s), and a valid photo ID [cite: 38, 43, 45, 46]. Once identity is successfully authenticated, the freeze is lifted; however, the IRS cautions that it can take up to nine additional weeks to finish processing the return and issue the refund [cite: 38, 40]. 

Taxpayers who have been confirmed victims of tax-related identity theft in the past are often placed into the Identity Protection PIN (IP PIN) program. The IRS issues a new, unique six-digit IP PIN to these individuals every December, which must be entered on the tax return to bypass these security freezes and allow the return to be accepted [cite: 37, 41].

### Missing Data, Math Errors, and Offsets

Not all delays are rooted in fraud prevention. Routine administrative and mathematical issues frequently pause processing. If a return contains a mathematical error, or if a filer forgot to include a form (such as a 1099-K for gig economy income), the IRS will attempt to correct the math automatically [cite: 4, 14, 17]. If the discrepancy cannot be resolved systemically, the IRS will issue a CP05 notice requesting clarification or additional documentation [cite: 17]. Taxpayers should follow the instructions on the notice exactly and avoid filing an amended return unless explicitly instructed to do so, as filing duplicate returns causes massive administrative confusion and further delays [cite: 3, 46].

Furthermore, a taxpayer may find that their refund has been issued, but the amount is significantly smaller than expected. This is often due to the Treasury Offset Program (TOP). Under this program, the Bureau of the Fiscal Service can legally intercept and reduce a federal tax refund to pay outstanding debts, including past-due federal or state taxes, back child support, and delinquent non-tax federal debts such as student loans [cite: 3, 26, 43]. When an offset occurs, the taxpayer is mailed a notice explaining the adjustment [cite: 3].

## State Versus Federal Refund Processing Timelines

A frequent source of anxiety during tax season is the discrepancy between state and federal refund timelines. It is common for a state tax refund to arrive weeks before—or weeks after—the federal refund, even when both returns were transmitted simultaneously via the same software [cite: 7, 47, 48].

State income tax processing and federal IRS processing are entirely separate ecosystems operating on different infrastructure, with distinct budgets, staffing levels, and security protocols [cite: 7, 47, 48]. In almost all scenarios, the state Department of Revenue will not even begin processing a state return until the federal return has been officially validated and accepted by the IRS [cite: 47, 49]. 

Because state agencies operate independently, processing speeds vary wildly across the country [cite: 27, 47]. 

*   **Accelerated State Processing:** States with recently modernized, highly efficient tax portals (often found in the South or Midwest) frequently process e-filed returns and issue direct deposits within a few days to a week, often outpacing the federal government [cite: 27, 47].
*   **Delayed State Processing:** Conversely, states dealing with massive return volumes, complex legislative changes, or aggressive anti-fraud measures take significantly longer [cite: 47]. For example, the California Franchise Tax Board (FTB) generally quotes a standard processing time of three to four weeks for e-filed returns, but warns that paper returns can take up to three months [cite: 50, 51, 52]. 

In certain tax years, localized legislative issues cause massive state-level delays. During the 2026 filing season, multiple states warned taxpayers of severe delays [cite: 53, 54]. Idaho informed early filers they could face up to 12 weeks of processing time due to a combination of internal agency budget cuts and the late passage of "conformity" legislation required to align the state's tax code with new federal deductions introduced by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act [cite: 53, 54]. Similarly, South Carolina and New York experienced severe processing backlogs due to third-party software glitches and non-conformity with recent federal tax shifts [cite: 53, 54].

To check the status of a state refund, taxpayers must visit their specific state's Department of Revenue website (such as the FTB portal in California) and provide their Social Security number and the exact state refund amount [cite: 27, 48, 50].

## Systemic Challenges and IRS Modernization Efforts

The speed at which a tax return transitions from filed to funded is heavily dependent on the overarching health and funding of the IRS. Historically, the agency struggled with a decade of budget stagnation, resulting in obsolete IT infrastructure and a severely depleted workforce [cite: 55, 56].

In 2022, the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act authorized approximately $80 billion over ten years to modernize the IRS [cite: 55, 57, 58]. This funding was targeted at upgrading archaic processing equipment, implementing voice and chat bots, digitizing paper returns through a "zero paper initiative," and hiring thousands of customer service representatives [cite: 23, 55]. Early implementation of these funds yielded immediate results. During the 2024 and 2025 filing seasons, the National Taxpayer Advocate noted significant improvements, including an 87% level of service on toll-free phone lines with average wait times of just three minutes, and the timely processing of over 98% of individual returns [cite: 12, 59].

However, the agency continues to face immense systemic pressures. Political negotiations resulted in the rescission of over $20 billion of the original modernization funding, which the Congressional Budget Office estimated would hamper revenue collection and IT upgrades through 2034 [cite: 55, 58]. 

These macro-level budget battles directly impact individual processing times. In her reports to Congress regarding the 2025 and 2026 filing seasons, National Taxpayer Advocate Erin M. Collins highlighted persistent, severe backlogs in specific departments. For instance, taxpayers who were victims of identity theft waited an average of 19 to 21 months for the Identity Theft Victim Assistance (IDTVA) unit to resolve their cases and issue their refunds [cite: 13, 15, 60]. Similarly, a backlog of 1.2 million Employee Retention Credit (ERC) claims remained frozen for over a year due to fraud concerns and manual review bottlenecks [cite: 13, 60]. 

Looking toward the future, the Advocate warned that entering the 2026 season, the IRS faced a 27% reduction in its IT workforce and a 22% reduction in Taxpayer Services staff [cite: 15, 56]. This staffing deficit, combined with the burden of programming systems to accommodate retroactive tax law changes—such as new deductions for tips and overtime, and the implementation of Trump Accounts for children under 18—creates significant risk [cite: 4, 15, 61]. While standard electronic returns will likely process smoothly, taxpayers whose returns are flagged for manual review may face extended wait times [cite: 15].

## Seeking Help: The Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS)

When a tax refund is delayed for an extended period, the financial toll on a household can be severe. If a return has been stuck in processing for more than 30 days past the normal timeframe, and standard channels have failed, taxpayers have recourse through the Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) [cite: 62, 63, 64].

The TAS is an independent organization operating within the IRS. Its mandate is to protect taxpayer rights and help resolve problems that cannot be fixed through normal administrative channels [cite: 62, 65]. However, the TAS cannot bypass the law; for example, they cannot release a refund held under the PATH Act before the mid-February deadline, nor can they magically expedite standard fraud checks without cause [cite: 62].

To qualify for TAS intervention, a taxpayer's situation must meet specific criteria defined in the Internal Revenue Manual. These fall into two main categories:

**1. Economic Burden (Financial Hardship):** These cases (Criteria 1-4) apply when an IRS action or inaction is causing significant financial difficulty. A taxpayer qualifies if the delay means they are facing an immediate threat of adverse action, such as eviction, foreclosure, utility shutoffs, inability to purchase food or necessary medication, or if they will incur significant costs (like professional representation fees) if relief is not granted [cite: 62, 63, 64, 65, 66]. 

**2. Systemic Burden:** These cases (Criteria 5-7) apply when an IRS system, process, or procedure has failed to operate as intended. A taxpayer qualifies if they have suffered a delay of more than 30 days beyond normal processing times, if the IRS has failed to respond by a promised date, or if the agency has sent multiple interim letters asking for more time without taking actual action [cite: 62, 63, 64, 65, 66]. 

Taxpayers who meet these criteria can request assistance by submitting Form 911 (Request for Taxpayer Advocate Service Assistance). When applying, it is crucial to provide a clear summary of the issue, copies of all IRS notices, and documentation proving the economic hardship (such as a utility shutoff notice) [cite: 62, 63, 66]. Under Section 7811 of the Internal Revenue Code, the National Taxpayer Advocate has the authority to issue a Taxpayer Assistance Order to force the IRS to release levied funds or expedite processing if a significant hardship is proven [cite: 65, 66, 67].

## Protective Claims and Evolving Legal Deadlines

In rare instances, processing delays and administrative hurdles are influenced by ongoing litigation. Recently, complex legal developments have raised questions regarding the deadlines for claiming older refunds. 

Following the ruling in *Kwong v. United States* (Nov. 2025), legal arguments have emerged suggesting that taxpayers affected by the COVID-19 federal disaster period may have extended deadlines to claim refunds or seek abatements of penalties from tax years 2019 through 2022 [cite: 68]. While the IRS does not automatically grant these extensions, the National Taxpayer Advocate has warned that tens of millions of taxpayers may be eligible for significant relief [cite: 69]. 

Because the law remains unsettled and future court decisions could alter the landscape, taxpayers who believe they are owed older refunds are advised to file "protective claims" using Form 843 (Claim for Refund and Request for Abatement) or Form 1040-X (Amended Return) on or before July 10, 2026 [cite: 68, 69]. A protective claim preserves the taxpayer's right to a refund while the underlying legal issues are resolved by the courts, ensuring they do not permanently lose access to funds due to an expired statute of limitations [cite: 68, 69].

## Bottom line

For the vast majority of taxpayers who file electronically and utilize direct deposit, the journey from submission to a funded bank account takes fewer than 21 days. However, behind the scenes, every return must successfully navigate a gauntlet of automated data-matching systems and predictive fraud-detection algorithms like the Return Review Program. If a return triggers an identity verification letter, contains a mathematical discrepancy, relies on mismatched employer data, or claims specific tax credits legally protected by the PATH Act, taxpayers should expect processing delays that extend from a few weeks to several months. To minimize anxiety, individuals should rely on the official IRS "Where's My Refund?" tracker, respond immediately to any physical notices received in the mail, and ensure all dependent and direct deposit information is thoroughly verified prior to filing.

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48. [IRS: E-file Information Returns](https://www.irs.gov/filing/e-file-information-returns)
49. [EZTaxReturn: Processing Timeline](https://www.eztaxreturn.com/resources/tips-irs-process-refund.html)
50. [SAM.gov: Return Review Program](https://sam.gov/opp/f771d0d2cf43f928279ea02777eaef9f/view)
51. [GAO: IRS Return Review Program](https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-18-544)
52. [GAO: RRP Highlights](https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-544-highlights.pdf)
53. [Accounting Today: Return Review Program Results](https://www.accountingtoday.com/news/irs-return-review-program-had-mixed-results-at-catching-tax-return-fraud)
54. [IRS: Return Review Program PIA](https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pia/rrp-pia.pdf)
55. [Money.com: State Refund Delays](https://money.com/state-tax-refund-delays-2026/)
56. [National Tax Tools: California Refund Tracker](https://nationaltaxtools.com/refund-tracker/california/)
57. [Sacramento Bee: CA Tax Refund](https://www.sacbee.com/news/business/personal-finance/article314548971.html)
58. [California FTB: Refund Status](https://www.ftb.ca.gov/refund/index.asp)
59. [Kiplinger: State Tax Refund Delays](https://www.kiplinger.com/taxes/2026-state-tax-refund-delays)
60. [GovTribe: Return Review Program RFI](https://govtribe.com/opportunity/federal-contract-opportunity/return-review-program-rrp-rrprfi)
61. [GAO: RRP Update](https://www.gao.gov/products/gao-18-544)
62. [IRS: Get Ready for Tax Season](https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/prepare-to-file-in-2026-get-ready-for-tax-season-with-key-updates-essential-tips)
63. [Taxes for Expats: Refund Delays](https://www.taxesforexpats.com/articles/tax-saving-strategies/tax-refund-delay.html)
64. [GovDelivery: E-News for Tax Professionals](https://content.govdelivery.com/accounts/USIRS/bulletins/3f98039)
65. [EZTaxReturn: Return is Being Processed](https://www.eztaxreturn.com/blog/what-does-your-return-is-being-processed-mean/)
66. [Reddit: Being Processed vs Still Being Processed](https://www.reddit.com/r/IRS/comments/1qonwgy/wmr_your_tax_return_is_being_processed_vs_your/)
67. [Reddit: Still Being Processed Nuance](https://www.reddit.com/r/IRS/comments/1qywly1/it_went_from_being_processed_to_still_being/)
68. [H&R Block: Checking Refund Status](https://www.hrblock.com/tax-center/irs/refunds-and-payments/checking-status-of-tax-refund/)
69. [YouTube: Being Processed Tracker Meanings](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HkdebfZAzhU)
70. [Halls IRS: Identity Verification Letters](https://www.hallsirs.com/irs-identity-verification-letters-what-to-do-if-you-get-a-5071c-or-4883c/)
71. [YouTube: 5071C vs 4883C](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3bJGtf4Px8)
72. [Tax Hardship Center: Letter 4883C](https://www.taxhardshipcenter.com/blog/verify-irs-letter-4883c-and-protect-your-identity/)
73. [Drake Software: Letters 5071C and 4883C](https://kb.drakesoftware.com/kb/Drake-Tax/13591.htm)
74. [Tax Help Law: Letter 4883C](https://taxhelplaw.com/solutions/other-problems/letter-4883c/)
75. [IRS: TAS Criteria IRM](https://www.irs.gov/irm/part13/irm_13-001-007)
76. [DiMercurio Advisors: Taxpayer Advocate Service](https://www.dimercurioadvisors.com/learning-center/how-the-taxpayer-advocate-service-can-help-when-the-irs-cant)
77. [Taxpayer Advocate: Submit a Request](https://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/contact-us/submit-a-request-for-assistance/)
78. [Taxpayer Advocate: Can TAS Help Me](https://www.taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov/can-tas-help-me-with-my-tax-issue/)
79. [The Tax Adviser: TAS Hardship Criteria](https://www.thetaxadviser.com/issues/2020/oct/taxpayer-advocate-service/)

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15. [legistorm.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGh11_Yenh1OfDgMDHZfFSnikJXbrO7a-Qna3KqIsiEkpVp7Z8XI_6AeIQblyxW1D4AC9KkkGRsZHWUHnPH1DhKfzhAAkWsn0W0AFSYHKNraKcJpsmG-4pqbALHkYEbeT-gGxPragaZFt5DE6O6WSU2chr5BM0KlWgYj8PzX1LOZx3ZejdIT9XnmdyRmVjot16NjrP_8rJDNdgeum_aXWxp3gvE84u2sZ2D-UEpnrVXSV8NlDtOFSiXPsLXVnYGTSy5uTQhRLwTjxgQ5NXxx70xXTQqr8wJGNwdVM_KmmycWaGSq_e_OEP_U2VLXYmlp0KHeL8s9B94u1xrLswtW1Dimh1ygC1SMY82m0FcGATzOXaBso7Xv5FDS37VJz0o5hsslDowNBrAaHnP5rQZZTreThNCwDzO)
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35. [jacksonhewitt.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEPJWvADmHyWCvRWgq-JoFRJhe8PGzkMX_C5T6iC4aFl3JozQ1MH95tutyDzWUGgzWtyTl4dleby_4FsOJ_MJQJJ2xkymV2VEe0BEO6seRC6TbwpWao4UduMyYY8q2gdrMqofhV9VqieZ27RzeCZ0LM8YAOWd8ujFc5t10nbZEFNqpdAiRALPqmU4cyN85gDLBOqozCoSeGjgx0GYV6B3Ui)
36. [intuit.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH2fBsyplW4Vkg3bk4--QoxBG9E2oEHw959z4SPfIL0tPTrdwQ8EnLW1hOhghje8sTuoEv_j0hNCQEJqbpRpZIo5zkJ89N474TMBsji_Ol_yvMzpgO8egHb0I_Zb5iDx_4ry67wA0spP7w1_CNAnqk71FQtxbktUB7jarxwUX7hvOBQ8RX9wWq5_cGWC1hZOUABrbc0kc88HaO3T2OYbIe8_ZZfHwt4VfJttaR7WCYgAKkk-4Qoykw=)
37. [hrblock.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHksv8t3-QEwBttAL1mU4F1RfNwxCnoyB10hw2JUoxllBrVRV3uoEvYE0fVbEDBvhYP_M_QmitTMQGzKxa-_Nm4oT3IxIq93rX4mGPYTDsNDwrOQaW8rcthJ4QTQc6ewhO3laPCG52pxYLk3OU7c0NUmBm0c-v7yaY33C6C3-172FvIYsH7D_5UasHiDgtk1N9tY54W)
38. [intuit.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQEe3in-c60qpyQiyJ_IPO498dKqpKLMtKrAtjmntDU56hNyZszFO2AbccPg71E_g2838qdvqXUFsq0vK0qz2mpq8W-LpaqaZ8dKIkTP7-xQiWpCR6NZMpoU0dlNQkDiIwanCcvABJLWDd5lYnS-e2yQwowxlqhr-vUoTUqQP0viQxafC_sSYWiABAfvC-iF7-sEMDjCsYGKDJcE0Jbc9UkXkdbrqsNnVVPWxi8=)
39. [taxhardshipcenter.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGFL12EgiS8X_8CpMd2vIZVoLvfRm5CV07oRanwAAdwt8ll46KlsP1_38BgtDZUJWED59hUvu-4G8gyJs_ZKzpgDBCBwFyeSH6RJVukOT6_6wvOzTnL66KwjjzxZu3Bz_Cd_FKkLF0eDCU5qf-81JVs0rqzsPLeue5V4nM9SZWn-PBJFgd3KxOwjxDRGVjNWQ==)
40. [youtube.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQG4UHcU-urKSN094Q4XKMAOFcgdKn4g7PCZpql-Y_GcWRuSJVMYwUJyjJfIht2Pah9sffNU16O-IT5o-llJTCTCKQtIsRcPE8vFMFAUBT9WBw5YV6EOJkRWooSBapxZkOZ1)
41. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF6vYztW3qiuGfGfGSSJ8H350Kl07w770l9H-ix2dUKIhJToECmgGt-PhGqvchquOJUawoaqGo2uQKJqE6sDT-3cNuQnJC6VoATFceQIB4F4nSpjkjXcoRWUEYFhG57BIMXTOhe7VXWZN7gsCxrjmN2J8Dgt46qjsNeO6dhxUH4KgUFShgSpMSnmMV_wRPQ-LYS5Jbz4_2GAi8wCQ==)
42. [id.me](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH5WHlh2bCwirOPAtNB5od9l-lxkx-xhEGkHl--a-bUiocu9fksQXVzL_rODXr1qIdiIyI0eNGJynK8h8RWTys1LuoGeefZSzA8m_31B8moBYwYagsoIhz9Fj-_y5c_vulJ9BCbSr7P8jgc-REvLdJQ8B-LN4mJVl5ehuPM)
43. [drakesoftware.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGUis5iXwZjYnH9ytYK_tGsoXosy7i1dvikXVzqJDJFjxlwS11ZQK2UnOWMyxsMpI_H6XfV-Bsqu0qCJBL98MIY3ZbzRrLExmebTUyTX5EvWubSjbZtefrprKq2-1mBvSX_PSoHIlxALMA=)
44. [hallsirs.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE016pMVhArTiayVgoelh1t7iTRClRFqifWS6CZAA8VfOqEtFRZN1YcTBvWDb4bpgMG7r4r9LMZcPqb0wEUFzmazwBX82QjkADpW8PqUa8cyPdytfHyjmQvlMYe4BTiKrUxkCMWM1nuC60mR9z7FhXyTcTJ4hjD7F3XHwAWq6Hte__l8gBXYhTG4y5rqAKtO5zxWxqhgMNwvQ==)
45. [taxhelplaw.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHYcbJI4ucqPAl5tCf2euWtu3A85Px6s-879hLvfXGJIYUSW1U_DMhTWyoA_qyzjFlqmQiZmIGt6gXYhTd1pBcFLCGMcfXEF2OMariv3r5D9RT7nk-qS6EFVSh9hgGp77fLzx__uxUN5OnqvJs8FCtPBYzW)
46. [youtube.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHseGhdGt7QBKtV9zAfVyEWe_7__s3XIOKZ5MjvoekQ0WFAun8_aiTLslm-4fZ5nxCv16i7wkNwdS9PTsvNFPDvXfPbtFWErIJ_cZrFXq95kaDCdq8Xd-cgK2kJi36ob3Jz)
47. [wattercpa.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGjF7q7Y0jnDNvPfEznsNDsUT81eWBwKReW9fJq8Ct_kKE4u-7HcYWL7nL1THJJvldeXEj93kPzUG-PIbWyBpkXvqS-fZNJ1VUEr1nGTJ6wBiG0MNlun3lsZ4wS1oJ35slvyplKRR-LzqNrsGeqL_CMvlx6DfSGEAc=)
48. [1040.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQG1RTFRnDHbev7a2M25tdvEjrtgNYw_UcxQ-W_acqtdvj0bn3BzsNgKgyg58ZXBjY5j43opcEgygX4RbYlomx4z9c5ZjEzjTikGqwbaINkMVj246E42HlK5A6q28ot-fv9jnEpyu8_DokQrg0gbw6ULQPlhPyN3MQ2GVGz4NIJrXQh8Lu1RE2gctbF6-6bTPDuA6IWEZw==)
49. [thomsonreuters.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGiEcVC_em1D1at6-Jh9vXl8McLT9zYAKP16x_LEa0KGEmlBA47NLnLExDjG6w21ikjbf1j7MIkS1j15bLIWDeJhqWuDUW85nWuZGday3CZ03qaIpp-2IW3v93z9f8TauBuc_8aCg9Dkk8CIICXbbcBl23xV4f5ZdKCyW06lYWnzP383DDdAPq256CRB0EorW4-UmrhFwyX7VhSZKrmo1GfezgB_A==)
50. [nationaltaxtools.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGveeFsBtpkQxfdavgmvEhTvvJEBNlv4Lm-yWucRejHEM341tF-qAMDycaixp23zEnyU2LuXC38pSbEfbyOCnujcW0KG9GSHC_V6mTwmuDkuirshX0TrmAtlgQ4o6pdIGDJV0g1qTesNpUwMwMc)
51. [sacbee.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFfCEuPZIqrAueGAZ7N_zmebB2DCuqyDop0_CCWdfqhkXnGZegdZouXEPcTHLk1pwoKQN6k4Bu1PTw23zdY_Ju6oeaSSeQEoN4eEWSJXXIqjckxxD0LQP0aKCnTkC7Hnm9KI9P84MsQUAHsM6B-87ankKF0f8OjYq5ligBFXRdp908=)
52. [ca.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH0xqEmViCda9PlI6avx3j799h2Ql9-73rUvu7GrgYwQI_efEU1Yf71yqxtV6OZj7rxMP1YgIgKSs2f7N0LXtoIK_POnbLGJEah-jx3TBYC5VglUau2XyFI6wcF7rs=)
53. [money.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGMNgaJwYgenXrZQWtjeZI0fckJKA0aiPfx0S3UNEeUteuCT_VJ6C-nIPuV7k3vitDNw1hdETy-nq6pq77-38NXi8JACxPMJGhS9KR6vKjOxoqMsfAgvSMo5JJayCweZNGka2k9jw==)
54. [kiplinger.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFdMZmPW3wkB809gBNux1Fgg5hcK6iY8PV2-EPFOfqvGoD8lPgCvjd2V6dTAuhRWYoULGMPSDHM7e4PvVBF99xduO8yYFZCGfZM5VQ9pxP3q7rLF-ba3pyR7ALzAGJvKV_tWgCl5HeQJipCXyyf-HFlDfs=)
55. [thomsonreuters.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF8kXwr_eqzD2iPDmnyc3Ohz1-1-oIxSl4PFlQMvsjERigw4GG_wXECFzEYrRKvQ_oSppgo98mra73r_y3_vsSYnpc4j8uGNIdNVB_KY30INw_NnYNMZDrgJ8UepbBPeyuW3k0XEeccRwK8xeOeeg4BQXLF_hhjB2FaE959d-a2yRAvciyMuzzPVn2g7FKJ_mopyT9UIPcOqp4ET60=)
56. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQG-MYcSugGLnGeR2tJ7aBRd_KWlegwloSHaPHKtt8e0GA3UwC53HTuV7Pi17cuG7z2wbZznbZyTzrEX0Uy5-4y4BP_finM-YViJ6un8dD9hRH9Vbjj56r3zKgTAPoZ-ojNbz9KsZw5Y64rWpBs8xlHAM-4j9NN8Epm7Ul-eVpouNhG-M5_lqXsyvCea1AJ4jwyqK-Ds958kJhLUdSTQ__fNZLW53l8a8QJ-ggLmQ62I-esIAZ68VVhW7E3o8OX7p3i8umT2vZY-k_IYP8GDganxPyg2rTxhUAuYPzsAPOpwxk3k728ICaVdvmwJ7sg-PQZv)
57. [eofnetwork.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFOxudOmkzs1KSRBuWtryoVwHIh0pQxPnImvad9WitQzrfJqSDTkAruDO_IZMpjQs_ZrbB6Np5k1UYS_-taAJnUPk6Qzv6wObhdDJUuVbXxv86OeFk2E0A7GjMXaKtQ_E60Ub2uPfLgk1xx7L5iQSb7KRlibT5Ne9e0izzPZp6tynGTZVeaNg2XaZastJpiXMFVQLmsL6pf)
58. [conference-board.org](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQH7pVYlgM28Sd9UuIMABuuMZY9WLfQrAxI0zswGpoVIIxMqEwA3DIeJxEAmHgVktKcLkXSYHrk_dW4_ONgYxzDW1kKhLlvdtZlv9J3Rhb25kebFWXntT3InOBbTXPtj4Lpq_xaGZxGwJqEQsd6yExT4EwuV3vYzVrqwSQdx)
59. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE-ni5-x_5hxbzGr2SWK65HKFa2WSmp2nRSbZN55UQ5QYw0VRHidUZCu-hxgL3Q0aRwFxEgTM6uaL3qPjmzY5KO848ORuFy2FiXhb858Z9GsSl8FpHazSwxr60_e3MMLYjGdJy0W6oFhMvdODwJhxZhokB3SiZ09tYm_F1JzUM5uCgOU5A8YA==)
60. [govdelivery.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHcXaPP4o-L3luSB5emz5WjxHO0HdKl11DOweadra5Ram9wg5nLqdgL2PGeEnOP-wwV5sFvRLGiGpymGjO2AbaRrTW3HYYRnPB-7QOboxy59pbgv7zkjkvS8Bk-ICu4gnwZKUKBx1gVMHTCC_tbos-dsGDnrmaw)
61. [youtube.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQF7SUlHR7zSshqKjnSG671FGlHsCNqZR3BY0uWLocEAIKGZ1FErWxwRAFE6zHV0Undcyc_ZWoiD4C5soXKcU6XpW4WIVK9dMBbLttaPut_JPQePVX1EP2cpO4djoN8M0O1c)
62. [dimercurioadvisors.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFJCiaUH2VJED6c5D3xV1AfEFhezJYTyD28yyrQZi1PqqseDprcgJIdj_jwveeR9za0Wub7gUEGhG9gtgW_NvVSblqbUH8FpyvjCpqap7QKO8L505reHE3Pk17Th-rQcx0uI8W3i370NZpYK5L6xPm43oqA7YBYOhxrnQWFwT2iEps2MS8DPQbRtKIZn3Uo0vGqUjS0hqq9CfdAgoi4myi-cTLCeGw=)
63. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQHLFIRPrPKexoHTuzfbxSSYwTWtM72xJb9AsjnFZ7da4kiZwimCYAZf3qpjahbCp_NT77gUN-KEgj04OI42gg5AM4Amvjc5n9aA0xbiEPIE5p38ZEgklaiVc0VqLUEEtYIXp8kBdO5G3iiOFnJdDK1opx-8y9g7RAC0lU7f8M0mYoXqNZbK8g==)
64. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGv5h_qwcgH5pM1boJk4ZCY9hzoXmmcsXLbZrUxyyB26qjAZqsqqZCynUMavxkWDN6QfbFQ4toNHVzTrdMEJ51mDHmtVabpsv4qY4LpNCggKGArRMH_67sFMFYSJ1F3zQ1eySdkD302pVzqOW8jFz7kK4P4lovp-NaW3SPsKw==)
65. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQE15G7DLNGFbLjDM1MnH1t86EF0U_zisHjMjQADaWIVP8Z-NujUEqwGq2Nfk2rjyrLI8r6-Bo-96pwHMgyBXHTB8hHrzDXeMpWBoJZ1cirmqEOO6XAz_rPUSy30UOgFv66HhVs=)
66. [thetaxadviser.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQFMwmQTzp6LcSMP-pNsb7JrEixuZzoCIIivqvSvu24EhBNAlgq6kPN7wb7PrUWNrxWHrlVckrVn5svb3Nj1CmuVUYyTO5Tq3hlhsaM4GXDR79GleyR0OfldoYIwzG4bakd-4iPh0CmJJkI9CjL8dS-jNm9ZhXPgGpug-WHFNBg=)
67. [foxrothschild.com](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGo7zkGC9AodFGT0ZGjMYun1QA6YhmPoaUXNQwA_EEGUhcQu5c3EBveMYG-Kz-9qYTBvV9Oe-JY4c2FjrJO7meCVnluZsFre_UUNZMmFCoUKEKNi598rOpXC562rldLnrcMU1hs6uW4HVltzy1Z1uTCMiXkWBTShLGdZGUw38qECD7CMgfwGiysE0eUkeB7N1xtqpdP-aMxcmMc2xGMGt-s5qXTvN84ZM5Izotzn_tnWXmqMd4=)
68. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGLuScJHsRWtLNOia5eFMaFQmf4MCTgxhvb7kfqVCidngel_ejF3NtUCJjmJqpUpWAZ0lx2UaLdKIg8HcLAaQ-KSSHq2OOHTj80o1-GbAVnfk0Vk1BouDEbgZJAKiumCl3sNG8IX8Ved7SQhPzyAZLkQ0pWWMnuI1NwJSKv3Up1v2Vu0Bq2fejiLaC2MQRVO7V54R7PQ09JdEM2UsZ026_vPMSfw3trapOeNCEKM3uloQJXDoLnk7Aao94usmDyHxU=)
69. [irs.gov](https://vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com/grounding-api-redirect/AUZIYQGa49IuTjnhbLayXpmrdnH1KMstEdSG_I50bvRskXgfuP0jKcfIBIZ2j39gNjkhyG4-GIhwkNJ5iKWQ6AnrwpDm8Um4QKcAJl-wBEbDjUXbIGuR-XKfPpfbmDiyliNF4O9dx4GT6l_4T0bsARsto4ier2V6Emx7OYIEqiX8tHwdcFPBljth2_l2oCOFl22e2UL_brEwkmpvsfO2nVfsD5GGJXSaxJ1Tcd3CAlvFbQaVkZ2WT38_E_yyl0U4Rw==)
