Understanding Why the IRS Changed Your Refund After a Review
If you are tracking your tax return using the IRS Account Transcript, few codes cause more confusion than Transaction Code 290 (TC 290). This code appears when the IRS assesses additional tax or recalculates your return, often reducing your expected refund. TC 290 usually follows a refund hold (TC 570), meaning the IRS completed its review and made a correction to your tax account.
For taxpayers waiting on a refund, seeing TC 290 can be frustrating—but it’s important to understand what it means, why it appears, and what steps you should take next.
This guide breaks down the meaning of TC 290, how it affects your refund, and what the IRS is really checking when they recalculate your return.
Transaction Code 290 means “Additional Tax Assessed.”
It indicates the IRS made a change to your return that results in:
TC 290 almost always reflects a correction made by the IRS, not by the taxpayer.
If TC 290 posts with an amount of $0, it often means the IRS finished its review and made no additional changes—but still had to run the correction cycle.
TC 290 appears when the IRS finds something on your return that requires correction. The most common reasons include:
If your W-2s or 1099s do not match IRS records, the IRS may adjust your taxable income.
Common causes:
If the withholding amounts you reported differ from what employers submitted, the IRS recalculates your refund accordingly.
TC 290 frequently appears when the IRS recalculates refundable credits, including:
If dependents, residency, schooling records, or income thresholds fail verification, the IRS adjusts the credit amount.
If the IRS cannot confirm your dependent meets eligibility rules, they may remove or reduce credits tied to that dependent.
Common causes:
Incorrectly claiming Head of Household is one of the most common triggers for IRS recalculation.
The IRS will reassess your status and adjust the refund accordingly.
During PATH Act holds (EITC/ACTC), the IRS verifies:
If anything does not line up, TC 290 posts as part of the IRS correction process.
TC 290 rarely appears alone. It is usually part of a sequence of refund hold and correction codes.
TC 290 is the point in the process where the IRS finalizes the corrected numbers.
Not always.
A zero-dollar TC 290 is very common. It simply means the IRS processed the review cycle but did not change your return.
The IRS will usually issue a TC 971 Notice with a corresponding date.
This is your clue that a letter is coming.
Common notices tied to TC 290 include:
You can also check the “Explanation of Transaction” on the transcript if available.
You have several options:
The notice will explain:
If the IRS is wrong, you can respond with proof.
Provide documentation showing:
If needed, you can correct mistakes through Form 1040-X.
Once the IRS finalizes your recalculation:
At this point, the refund is considered final unless you appeal or amend.
Transaction Code 290 is one of the clearest signs the IRS has completed a review and made an adjustment to your return. It often follows a refund hold (TC 570) and represents the IRS’s final determination after recalculating income, credits, and withholding.
TC 290 can mean:
Understanding this code helps you know where your return stands and what to expect next—especially if you are waiting on your final refund amount.
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