Why Your IRS Refund Release Date and Your Actual Bank Deposit Date Are Not the Same
When you are tracking your refund through IRS transcripts, nothing is more important than Transaction Code 846. For millions of taxpayers, TC 846 is the moment of relief—the code that means the IRS has officially released your refund. But one of the most misunderstood parts of the refund process is this:
The TC 846 date is NOT the day the refund will hit your bank account.
Instead, it is the date the IRS sends the money out. Your bank or financial institution determines when the deposit actually becomes available.
If you want to understand exactly when your refund will arrive, this guide breaks down the difference between the IRS 846 release date and your actual bank deposit date, so you know exactly what to expect.
TC 846 – Refund Issued
This is the final, most important code on the IRS Account Transcript. It means:
The date next to TC 846 is the official disbursement date—the day the IRS sends your refund to your bank or card provider.
It is not the same as your deposit date.
The IRS processes refunds in batches. When your return reaches the end of the cycle and passes every final check, TC 846 posts with a date indicating:
This is the date the IRS transmits funds to your bank.
On that date, the payment leaves the Treasury Department and enters the banking system.
Once the IRS releases the funds, the timing is out of their hands.
After the IRS releases your refund, your financial institution must:
Depending on the bank, this can take:
This is why two taxpayers with the same TC 846 date may receive their deposits on different days.
The most common pattern is:
If the TC 846 date is a Friday, weekend processing rules mean:
This timeline varies based on the bank’s internal posting policies.
After TC 846 posts, IRS systems consider your refund fully processed.
Where’s My Refund and IRS2Go often display messages such as:
But they will not show banking delays or posting issues.
Only your transcript provides the actual release date.
Even after TC 846 posts, certain issues can delay your refund reaching your account:
Banks may reject deposits that do not match account names or numbers.
Some institutions delay large or unusual deposits for review.
Funds released after banking hours often post the next business day.
These can delay posting until the next banking day.
Many prepaid card companies batch-process payments more slowly.
Some banks hold deposits until identity can be confirmed.
Once TC 846 posts:
From there, the deposit timeline depends entirely on your bank.
If your bank rejects the deposit, the IRS will mail a paper check, which can take several weeks.
If five business days pass after your TC 846 date and no deposit arrives:
If the bank confirms no deposit ever arrived:
This is rare, but it can happen when account information is incorrect.
Understanding the difference between the TC 846 date and your bank’s deposit date is essential during refund season.
TC 846 means: “The IRS has released your refund.”
It does not mean: “The money is already in your account.”
Most taxpayers receive their deposit 1–3 business days after the TC 846 release date, but exact timing depends on the bank’s posting schedule. Watching your transcript gives you the most accurate view of where your refund stands in the process.
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