You’re checking your IRS transcript and suddenly you see it:
TC 841 – Refund Reversed
If you don’t know what it means, it can be alarming — but here’s the truth:
TC 841 is not a denial of your refund. It means your bank rejected the IRS deposit and returned the money back to the Treasury.
Your refund exists — you just didn’t receive it.
Banks reject IRS deposits for several specific reasons:
The most common cause: a bank name mismatch
(example: refund issued to “John & Sarah” but account is only in Sarah’s name)
Here is the exact timeline of events:
TC 846 appears
Refund sent to bank electronically
Bank returns deposit
IRS receives reversal signal
Refund marked as returned to IRS
IRS switches payment method
New issuance scheduled
Paper check is issued
Typically 4–8 week delay begins
This is why a TC 841 can turn a 21-day refund into a 60-day wait.
If TC 841 shows up — DO NOT just wait passively.
Check your mailing address
Make sure it is current
If not — file Form 8822 immediately to update it
If allowed, you may be able to request a corrected bank account number via IRS Online Account
1-800-829-1954
Follow prompts for refund return/replacement
This confirms whether the bank rejected the deposit
AND that the IRS has initiated a check reissue
File Form 3911 to initiate a stop-payment
And request a reissue
Before filing next year:
If you are unsure — call your bank and ask:
“Can a U.S. Treasury direct deposit be accepted into this account?”
This one question can prevent a 6-week disaster.
You’ll typically see this progression:
TC 846 – Refund Issued
TC 841 – Refund Reversed (Bank Rejection)
TC 971 – Notice Issued (explaining issue)
TC 840 – Manual Refund Request (Paper Check)
If you see TC 840 — the check is being printed.
If you see a second TC 846 — the check is on its way.
Do NOT:
The IRS must complete the reversal and re-issue cycle — YOU must ensure your address and account info are accurate.
TC 841 is not a rejection of your refund — it is a rejection of the delivery method.
Your refund wasn’t denied — it bounced back due to account-related issues.
Once corrected, it will be re-issued as either:
By knowing what TC 841 means — and reacting fast — you can stop the delay from stretching into months.
If you’ve been checking your IRS tax transcripts and noticing that refund dates look farther…
.Every year, millions of working Americans miss out on money they’ve already earned — not…
If you’re claiming the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or the Additional Child Tax Credit…
Tax season brings refunds, relief—and unfortunately, scammers. Each year, thousands of taxpayers fall victim to…
Last updated for the 2026 tax filing season The Protecting Americans from Tax Hikes (PATH)…
The 2026 tax season is officially underway, and as happens every year, a small number…