The End of Paper Refunds Has Arrived
The IRS is officially moving away from physical refund checks. For decades, taxpayers could request their refund by check in the mail. But beginning with the 2025 tax year (filed in 2026), the IRS is enforcing the final stage of the paper check phase-out, replacing them with:
- Direct Deposit, OR
- Treasury-issued Prepaid Debit Card
The government’s stated goal is to eliminate all paper refund checks for individual returns.
This shift is part of a modernization initiative to speed up refund delivery, reduce fraud, and eliminate the massive cost of printing and mailing checks.
Why the IRS Eliminated Paper Checks
There are three main reasons for the phase-out:
1. Fraud & Identity Theft
Paper checks can be stolen, forged, intercepted, or fraudulently redirected.
2. Cost
Paper checks cost more than triple the expense of digital deposits, once printing, processing, and postage are accounted for.
3. Processing Time
Paper check refunds are the slowest form of refund — often adding 3–6 additional weeks to processing compared to electronic payments.
What Your Refund Options Will Be
Starting in 2026, taxpayers must choose:
Option 1: Direct Deposit
Deposit directly into:
- checking account
- savings account
- credit union account
This is the fastest possible refund option, often hitting the account 1–3 days after TC 846 posts.
Option 2: Treasury Prepaid Debit Card
For taxpayers who:
- do not have a checking or savings account
- do not want to provide banking details
- have had banking rejections in the past
The IRS will issue a Treasury-linked prepaid debit card for refunds.
Card features include:
- FDIC insured
- PIN protected
- reloadable
- no credit check
- accessible through ATMs and point-of-sale
This replaces the traditional paper check.
What Happens If You Don’t Make a Choice
If you do not choose direct deposit when filing:
- you automatically receive your refund via Treasury-issued prepaid card
- not a check
- not a mailed warrant
There will no longer be a “mail me a paper check” option.
The New Filing Requirement: Bank or Identity Verification
For direct deposit, the IRS is implementing additional verification to prevent fraud:
- routing number verification
- account ownership matching
- name identity tie-back to SSN
- risk-flagging of mismatched accounts
This is why entering someone else’s bank account — even a spouse’s — will increasingly trigger refund rejections.
Big Question: What About the Unbanked?
Traditionally, 6–7 million Americans do not maintain a bank account.
This group is the reason prepaid refunds exist. The Treasury card system acts as:
- a substitute for bank access
- a safe, electronically traceable payment method
- an anti-theft measure
- a fraud-prevention tool
What This Means for Taxpayers
If you always used direct deposit
Your experience will be faster, simpler, and less risky.
If you depended on paper checks
Prepare now:
- obtain a checking or savings account
- or prepare to receive your refund as a prepaid card
- or use a reputable prepaid option like Green Dot or Netspend that you personally control
Timeline of the Phase-Out
- 2024: Paper checks still allowed
- 2025: Strong IRS encouragement to use digital payment
- 2026: Paper refund checks eliminated for individual taxpayers
Some exceptions for legal entities or guardianship filings may remain temporarily.
The future of tax refunds is 100 percent electronic.
The IRS paper check era is over.
You MUST:
- provide a bank account for direct deposit
or - receive your refund via Treasury-issued debit card
This shift will speed up refunds, tighten security, and eliminate the uncertainty of waiting for a paper check to arrive in the mail.
