IRS Tax Refund Status 2025: ‘Where’s My Refund?’ — Average Amounts, Delays Explained
Millions of Americans are waiting for tax refunds. Here’s how to check your status, why it might be delayed, and when to expect your money.
2025 Average Refund Amounts
According to the latest IRS data through April 2025:
- Average federal refund: $3,116 (up 4.8% from last year)
- Average direct deposit refund: $3,228
- Total refunds issued so far: $231.4 billion
How Long Does It Actually Take?
| Filing Method | Refund Method | Typical Wait |
|---|---|---|
| E-file | Direct Deposit | 21 days or less |
| E-file | Paper Check | 4–6 weeks |
| Paper Return | Direct Deposit | 6–8 weeks |
| Paper Return | Paper Check | 8–12 weeks |
Why Is Your Refund Delayed? Top Reasons
- ID verification required — IRS flagged your return for identity theft prevention. You’ll get a letter with instructions.
- Errors on your return — Mismatched names, SSNs, or math errors cause manual review.
- Claiming EITC or Child Tax Credit — By law, IRS cannot release these refunds before February 15.
- Filed a paper return — IRS is still processing millions of paper returns from 2024.
- DOGE staffing cuts — IRS lost thousands of employees in 2025. Processing times have increased 15–20% at some service centers.
The Tracker Shows “Still Processing” — Now What?
If the IRS refund tracker has shown “still processing” for more than 21 days after e-filing:
- Wait 21 days before calling — the IRS phone line cannot give additional information before then
- Call the IRS at 1-800-829-1040 (expect 45–90 minute waits)
- Check if you received any IRS letters — even if marked “notice,” always open them
- Consider calling your local Taxpayer Advocate Service (TAS) if it’s been 60+ days
Get Your Refund Faster Next Year — 5 Pro Tips
- Always e-file — it’s 3x faster than paper
- Use direct deposit to a bank account you own (not a prepaid card)
- Double-check all SSNs and birthdays — one wrong digit causes weeks of delay
- File early — before tax season peaks in March
- Use IRS Free File if your income is under $79,000
Sources: IRS.gov | Treasury Department | qivsy Finance & Consumer Affairs Desk