How the IRS Uses Transcript Codes to Flag, Freeze, and Secure Refunds in 2026
Every tax season, the IRS enhances security systems to protect taxpayers from refund fraud, identity theft, and improper claims. For 2026, new and updated refund protection initiatives mean transcript codes will play an even more important role in refund tracking.
If you monitor your IRS Account Transcript, these codes tell you exactly when your refund is under review, when identity checks are triggered, and when your refund is released.
This guide explains the key IRS transcript codes tied to refund protection initiatives—and what each one means for your refund timeline.
The IRS continues to strengthen refund fraud prevention systems due to:
As a result, more returns undergo automated checks before refunds are approved. Transcript codes now track these expanded protection steps more transparently.
Below are the transcript codes most closely connected to 2026 refund protection programs. These codes indicate identity verification checks, fraud holds, dependent claims verification, and refund freezes.
The standard refund hold.
TC 570 remains the most common protection-related code. It means:
TC 570 does not automatically mean fraud. It is part of routine refund screening under the IRS’s enhanced protection filters.
The most serious refund protection code.
TC 810 is used when:
TC 810 freezes the refund until the taxpayer verifies identity or the IRS resolves the concern.
If you see TC 810, action is required. The IRS may send Letter 5071C, 4883C, or 5747C for identity verification.
TC 971 appears when the IRS sends:
This code is now used more frequently due to expanded verification programs.
While TC 976 normally indicates an amended return, the IRS also uses it when:
TC 976 may trigger a fraud review before refunds are released.
TC 420 signals that a return has been selected for examination due to:
It is part of the IRS’s expanded refund protection initiative for returns showing high-risk patterns.
This code indicates:
A TC 424 does not guarantee an audit, but it means the return is under deeper inspection.
A newer security code used to:
TC 899 may appear for taxpayers with an IP PIN or who recently confirmed identity.
This pairing is becoming more common in 2026.
Many protection filters automatically generate TC 971 before the IRS issues a letter.
While not strictly a fraud code, TC 826 is part of refund protection because:
Because the IRS expands security filters every year, taxpayers will see more temporary delays. Here is how the timeline typically works:
Transcript shows TC 150.
Can trigger TC 570, TC 810, TC 971, or TC 976.
Codes 571, 572, or 811 appear.
TC 846 – Refund Issued posts with the payment date.
Where’s My Refund updates to show deposit or check status.
Understanding these codes helps taxpayers know whether their refund is simply paused for routine screening or frozen for identity verification.
To avoid longer delays and fraud-related holds:
These steps dramatically reduce the chance of triggering TC 810 or extended TC 570 reviews.
Refund protection initiatives continue to expand, and IRS transcript codes now play a critical role in showing taxpayers exactly what is happening behind the scenes. Codes like TC 570, TC 810, TC 971, TC 976, TC 420, and TC 424 are now the frontline indicators of identity checks, verification holds, and fraud-prevention reviews.
Understanding these codes helps taxpayers:
Your IRS Account Transcript remains the most powerful tool for decoding refund issues long before Where’s My Refund updates.
When the IRS puts your return under a microscope There are dozens of transcript codes…
Why the WMAR tracker stops updating — and how to escalate a stalled 1040-X If…
How to properly complete Columns A, B, and C on Form 1040-X If you are…
Act fast to protect the non-liable spouse’s portion of the refund For married couples filing…
E-file doesn’t mean fast — and taxpayers deserve the truth The IRS proudly announced that…
How to Adjust Your Withholding Now to Maximize the Impact of the New OBBB Deductions…