Child Tax Credit (CTC) and Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) refunds are delayed until at least February 15 due to the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act, which mandates this pause to prevent fraud and verify wage information. The IRS typically releases these funds in late February or early March.
The return has errors, is incomplete or is affected by identity theft or fraud. The return needs a correction to the child tax credit or recovery rebate credit amount. The return has a claim filed for an earned income tax credit, additional child tax credit, or includes a Form 8379, Injured Spouse Allocation PDF.
If you claimed the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC), the IRS cannot issue these refunds before mid-February. This applies to the entire refund, even the portion not associated with these credits. Check Where's My Refund in mid-to late February for your personalized refund date.
Why am I not getting the child tax credit
If you don't receive your CCB payment on the expected payment date, before you contact us, you can: Check the status of your payment in your CRA account. Make sure your personal information is up to date. Check other reasons for stopped or changed payments.
Although these changes were scheduled to expire at the end of 2025, the FY2025 reconciliation law (P.L. 119-21) made them permanent. That law also permanently increased the maximum child tax credit from $2,000 per child to $2,200 per child, while indexing it to inflation.
Your refund is taking so long likely due to errors or incomplete info on your return, suspected identity theft/fraud, claiming certain tax credits (like EITC/ACTC), filing a paper return, or outstanding debts/audits, with electronic filing and direct deposit usually being the fastest, while mail or complex returns take longer for the IRS to process.
Errors in your tax return calculations can cause delays as the IRS may need to correct them. A mismatch between your Social Security Number and the records can significantly delay your refund. Filing your tax return too early or too late can lead to delays due to IRS system updates or high processing volumes.
You may call us toll-free at 800-829-1040, M - F, 7 a.m. - 7 p.m.
However, the IRS can take a little longer to issue refunds that have certain credits such as the Child Tax Credit and the Additional Child Tax Credit in an effort to reduce tax return fraud. To check the status of your refund, you can use our tool to track your refund.
Starting in July, most families with children will get child tax credit payments in their bank account. People who receive payments by direct deposit will get their first payment by July 15 and payments will go out on the 15th of the month each month after that until the end of 2021.
The IRS only updates your refund status information once per week on Wednesdays. If you e-file your tax return, wait at least 72 hours from the date the IRS confirms receipt of your return before checking your refund status, and at least three weeks if you mail the return instead.
You generally shouldn't worry if your refund is "still being processed," as it means the IRS is working on it, but it might take longer than the typical 21 days due to common issues like errors, incomplete information, or claiming credits like the EITC/ACTC. Worry only becomes necessary if you receive an IRS letter requesting more information or if the "Where's My Refund?" tool shows a specific problem like fraud, but typically, it just means a longer wait, not no refund at all.
To reduce fraudulent claims, the Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH) Act of 2015 gives the IRS more time to review tax returns. The IRS typically doesn't issue refunds before February 15 for those claiming the Additional Child Tax Credit.
Actually, yes – the IRS will generally pay you interest if you're due a tax refund from the overpayment of taxes. The IRS has 45 days to pay a tax refund before interest payments to you kick in.
You may get a letter or notice from the IRS saying there's a problem with your tax return or your refund will be delayed. There are many reasons why the IRS may be holding your refund. You have unfiled or missing tax returns for prior tax years. The check was held or returned due to a problem with the name or address.
If the IRS decides that your return merits a second glance, you'll be issued a CP05 Notice 1 . This notice lets you know that your return is being reviewed to verify any or all of the following: Your income. Your tax withholding.
There's no strict maximum limit for how long the IRS can hold a refund, but they must pay interest after 45 days; while most e-filed returns take 21 days, returns needing extra review for errors, fraud, or certain credits (like EITC/ACTC) can take months (45-180+ days), and amended returns can take 8-16 weeks, with unfiled returns having an indefinite delay until filed.
Contact the IRS if: It's been 21 days or more since you e-filed.
Sometimes the delay stems from something simple. Perhaps there's a mistake on your return or missing information that requires clarification. First-time claimants often wait longer too, as HMRC applies additional verification steps to new applicants.
How can you avoid an IRS tax refund delay?