Understanding the Two Most Important IRS Transcript Codes That Stop Your Refund
If you check your IRS tax transcript during refund season, two codes can immediately tell you whether your refund is delayed and why. These codes are:
Although both codes stop your refund from being released, they are not the same. Knowing the difference between TC 570 and TC 810 can help you understand whether your delay is temporary or part of a more serious identity verification issue.
This guide breaks down each code, what it means, how long it lasts, and what steps to take if you see it on your transcript.
TC 570 – Additional Account Action Pending (Refund Hold)
TC 570 is the most common refund delay code. It appears when the IRS needs more time to review your return.
TC 570 indicates:
A TC 570 hold typically clears when you receive:
These codes mean the review was completed and the refund is one step closer to release.
TC 570 delays usually last days to weeks, depending on the complexity of the return and filing season volume.
TC 570 is frustrating, but it typically resolves without major action from the taxpayer.
TC 810 – Refund Freeze (Suspected Identity Theft or Fraud)
TC 810 is more serious and indicates the IRS has frozen your entire refund due to suspicion of identity theft or potential fraud.
TC 810 indicates:
This code appears when the IRS suspects someone may be trying to:
A refund freeze remains until the IRS manually clears the issue.
To remove the freeze, you typically need:
Once resolved, you will see:
Only after TC 811 posts can the IRS continue processing your refund.
TC 810 delays can last months, depending on how quickly the taxpayer completes verification.
Unlike TC 570, a TC 810 freeze will not clear on its own. Action is required.
| Feature | TC 570 – Refund Hold | TC 810 – Refund Freeze |
|---|---|---|
| Severity | Moderate | High (Fraud/ID Theft Concern) |
| Reason | Routine review or mismatch | Suspicious, potentially fraudulent return |
| Refund Status | Paused temporarily | Frozen indefinitely |
| Requires Action? | Usually no | Always yes |
| How It Clears | TC 571 or TC 572 | TC 811 |
| Typical Delay | Days to weeks | Weeks to months |
| Triggered By | Credits, dependents, income mismatch | Identity theft, fraud filters, SSN conflict |
| IRS Division | General processing | Identity Protection or Fraud Unit |
This comparison shows just how different the two codes are, even though both stop refunds.
You can check your status by:
A TC 570 hold often appears around the same time as TC 150.
A TC 810 freeze may appear early in processing or after IRS fraud detection triggers.
Both TC 570 and TC 810 stop your refund, but the reasons and outcomes are dramatically different:
Understanding these codes can help you determine whether your refund delay is a minor inconvenience or a sign that you need to verify your identity with the IRS.
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