Every tax season, millions of refunds are issued automatically. At the same time, billions of dollars in attempted fraud are stopped before the money ever leaves the Treasury. Standing between legitimate taxpayers and large-scale refund fraud is a specialized IRS operation known as RIVO.
Understanding the IRS RIVO fraud review process explains why some refunds freeze suddenly, why transcript codes like TC 810 appear without warning, and why refunds cannot be released until identity or claim authenticity is confirmed.
What Is the IRS Return Integrity Verification Operation (RIVO)?
The Return Integrity Verification Operation (RIVO) is the IRS unit responsible for pre-refund fraud detection.
RIVO’s mission is to stop:
- Identity theft refunds
- Fabricated income schemes
- Inflated or fictitious credits
- Organized refund fraud
Unlike wage verification or math error checks, RIVO focuses on intent and pattern risk, not calculation accuracy.
How RIVO Detects Fraud: The 180+ Filter System
RIVO relies on more than 180 automated filters that scan tax returns for known fraud indicators.
These filters analyze:
- Filing patterns across multiple returns
- Identity mismatches and anomalies
- Unusual credit claims
- Repeated refund routing methods
- Credit combinations associated with fraud rings
Certain credits—such as large Fuel Tax credits or emerging credit programs like OBBB—are closely monitored because of historical abuse patterns.
Why RIVO Reviews Feel Sudden
RIVO operates silently and early in processing.
This means:
- Returns may appear to process normally at first
- No advance warning is given
- A refund freeze can occur before WMR updates
- The transcript reflects the action before any notice arrives
This is by design. Fraud prevention must occur before funds are released.
TC 810: The Refund Freeze Code
When RIVO flags a return, the IRS applies TC 810 (Refund Freeze) to the account.
TC 810 means:
- The refund is legally blocked
- No funds can be issued
- Automated processing stops immediately
Unlike temporary holds, a TC 810 does not self-release.
What Happens Next?
Once a TC 810 posts, one of two paths follows:
Identity Authentication Path
- The IRS may require identity verification
- Online tools or mailed letters are used
- Successful authentication can lift the freeze
Audit or Fraud Review Path
- The return is reviewed in detail
- Documentation may be requested
- The freeze remains until the case is resolved
Until one of these paths is completed, the refund cannot move forward.
Why RIVO Is Not a “Normal” Delay
RIVO cases differ from other holds because:
- The issue is not data mismatch or timing
- Refund issuance is legally prohibited
- Manual or automated authentication is required
Calling the IRS before receiving instructions rarely accelerates resolution.
How RIVO Activity Appears on Transcripts
Common transcript indicators include:
- TC 810 (Refund Freeze)
- Lack of refund issuance codes
- Long periods with no account movement
These are signs of an integrity-based hold, not a backlog issue.
The IRS RIVO fraud review process exists to protect legitimate taxpayers by stopping fraudulent refunds before money is lost.
A RIVO freeze does not automatically mean fraud was committed. It means:
- The return triggered risk filters
- The refund cannot be released yet
- Verification or review must occur first
Once authenticity is confirmed, processing can resume.
