How to Check Your Refund Status When “Where’s My Refund” Stops Updating
Every year, millions of taxpayers find themselves stuck in the same frustrating cycle:
They filed weeks ago, checked Where’s My Refund, and the screen still says:
When WMR stops updating, taxpayers often feel stuck in a refund tracking loop with no answers. But the solution is simple and reliable:
Check your IRS Account Transcript.
Your transcript is the only place where you can see the real refund status, internal review codes, and—most importantly—TC 846, the official “Refund Issued” date.
This guide shows you exactly how to break out of the WMR loop and use your transcript to confirm your refund status within minutes.
WMR is a limited tool. It updates only once per day and depends on several systems syncing correctly. WMR can fail or freeze because:
WMR is also blind to many transcript codes, especially refund holds or adjustments.
This is why taxpayers often see no updates even when their transcripts reveal that processing has moved forward.
Your IRS Account Transcript updates before WMR and includes the actual internal codes the IRS uses to process returns.
Your transcript shows:
WMR does not show any of this.
When WMR fails, these are the codes that tell the full story.
Confirms the IRS has officially posted your tax return.
Means the IRS is reviewing income, credits, dependents, or verification issues.
This is the code you are looking for.
TC 846 is the IRS’s official confirmation that your refund has been approved and is being sent.
Once TC 846 appears, your refund is on the way regardless of what WMR says.
Follow this exact process to see your real refund status:
Visit IRS.gov and sign in or create an account.
This section contains all available transcripts.
Do not choose Tax Return Transcript—Account Transcript shows processing codes.
This is where all activity appears in chronological order.
You are looking for:
TC 846 – Refund Issued
It will show:
This is the most accurate refund status available anywhere.
If your transcript shows TC 846:
TC 846 overrides anything WMR says.
If TC 846 is missing, look for these codes to understand your situation:
Generic message about refund processing—normal but not useful.
Means your refund is on hold.
No refund can be issued until this hold is lifted.
IRS is sending you a letter.
Often relates to:
IRS reviewed your return and adjusted it.
Your return has not fully posted yet.
Your transcript will always tell you more than WMR.
WMR typically updates:
Many taxpayers receive their refund before WMR ever updates.
WMR uses a simplified refund system and updates after the IRS master file has already completed processing. Your transcript updates first, because that is where IRS code changes show up internally.
This mismatch creates the illusion that the refund is stuck—but in reality, the transcript shows the true status.
Use your transcript instead of WMR when:
In all these situations, the transcript provides answers WMR cannot.
If Where’s My Refund stalls or stops updating, the IRS Account Transcript is the only accurate way to check your refund status. By reviewing the Transactions section and finding TC 846, you can confirm exactly when your refund is issued—even when WMR is unhelpful, delayed, or completely wrong.
During tax season, the fastest path out of the refund tracking loop is simple:
Trust your transcript, not WMR.
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