Why More Returns Are Being Flagged for Review in 2026—and What It Means for Your Refund
The IRS is undergoing the biggest technology shift in decades. Fueled by funding from the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), the agency is aggressively expanding automation, artificial intelligence (AI), and machine-learning tools to spot errors and potential fraud earlier in the process. While the long-term goal is faster, more accurate tax administration, the short-term result is clear:
More returns than ever are being flagged for review, resulting in more refund delays.
If your transcript suddenly shows TC 570, or your refund seems frozen without warning, there’s a good chance your return was flagged by one of these new automated compliance systems.
This guide breaks down what the IRS AI systems are doing, why they’re causing delays, and how taxpayers can navigate this new era of automated tax enforcement.
The IRS has invested heavily in:
These systems allow the IRS to scan returns faster and flag suspicious or inconsistent information well before human review.
For taxpayers, this means:
The AI systems now catch issues that older IRS systems could not.
The new AI-driven filters are designed to detect:
These triggers previously required human review, meaning only a fraction of returns were delayed.
Now, AI flags thousands more in seconds.
The result: More TC 570 holds than in prior years.
The code most taxpayers now see due to AI flagging is:
TC 570 – Additional Account Action Pending
This code freezes the refund until:
AI may place the hold immediately, but lifting it still often requires human intervention.
This can add 2–12 weeks to processing times depending on the type of review.
AI systems focus heavily on patterns known to cause errors or fraud. Returns likely to be flagged include:
Particularly those claiming:
AI quickly detects unusual wage-to-withholding ratios.
Especially when a dependent is claimed on multiple returns.
The IRS now receives near-real-time data from employers and payers.
AI compares filing patterns to known fraud models.
AI flags high deductions, inconsistent income, or missing 1099s.
When IRS wage data has not fully loaded, mismatches occur more easily.
AI systems are designed to focus on risk, not randomness.
AI dramatically shifts the refund timeline in several ways:
AI stops more returns early in the process, but review departments are still human-staffed.
Expect more:
Including identity protection and wage verification teams.
Because AI flags more returns, the IRS must manually review a larger number of cases.
The IRS is placing accuracy over speed, meaning refunds move only after all inconsistencies are cleared.
If your return is flagged:
AI detection is fast. Resolution is not.
While you cannot prevent all reviews, you can reduce your risk by:
Match numbers exactly.
Names, SSNs, and residency must match IRS records.
Avoid filing too early in January.
AI quickly spots inconsistencies.
Delays increase when documents are missing.
Look for TC 570, 971, or other review indicators.
Automation rewards accuracy and consistency.
Long-term, IRS automation should lead to:
But in the early stages of adoption (2025–2027), delays are likely to increase as AI flags more returns than the IRS has staff to manually review.
Taxpayers will benefit—but the transition will be bumpy.
The IRS’s new AI and automation systems are reshaping the refund timeline. While these tools catch more errors and fraud than ever before, they also create more TC 570 refund holds, more compliance reviews, and more early-season delays.
If you see a refund freeze this year, there is a good chance an automated compliance check triggered it—not a traditional audit or manual review.
Understanding how AI works inside IRS systems helps you predict delays, respond faster, and avoid common triggers that slow your refund.
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