Few transcript combinations confuse taxpayers more than seeing a refund issued, then suddenly reversed, followed by… nothing. No new deposit. No check. Just silence.
That silence usually lives between TC 841 and TC 840.
Understanding Transaction Code 841 vs 840 explains what happens when a refund is rejected by a bank, why the IRS cannot simply “re-send” it automatically, and why a human must step in to get the money back out to you.
What Is Transaction Code 841?
TC 841 represents an automated refund reversal.
It posts when:
- A direct deposit is rejected by the bank
- The account number is invalid or closed
- The bank returns the funds to the IRS
Key characteristics of TC 841:
- Fully automated
- Triggered by the banking system
- Does not require an IRS employee to initiate
When TC 841 posts, the refund is no longer in transit.
What Is Transaction Code 840?
TC 840 represents a manual refund issued by the IRS.
It posts when:
- An IRS employee authorizes a new refund
- A paper check is generated
- The refund must be reissued outside automation
TC 840 is:
- Human-initiated
- Slower than TC 846
- Often the only way to get rejected funds paid again
Why TC 841 and TC 840 Often Appear Together
When a bank rejects a refund:
- The bank sends the money back
- The IRS system posts TC 841
- The refund amount moves into Credit Balance status
At this point, the IRS system cannot automatically resend the money.
Automation ends here.
To release the funds again, an IRS employee must:
- Review the rejection
- Confirm eligibility for reissuance
- Manually authorize payment
That authorization is TC 840.
Credit Balance: The Refund Limbo Zone
After TC 841 posts, the money is not gone—it is parked.
In Credit Balance status:
- The IRS holds the funds internally
- No payment is scheduled
- No automatic timeline applies
This is why taxpayers often wait weeks with no updates after a rejection.
Why the IRS Does Not Automatically Re-Deposit
The IRS cannot assume:
- The same bank account is now valid
- A different account is safe
- Fraud is not involved
Federal controls require manual confirmation before reissuing funds, especially after a failed electronic payment.
How TC 841 vs 840 Appears on Transcripts
A common sequence looks like this:
- TC 846 — Refund issued
- TC 841 — Refund returned by bank
- Credit balance appears
- TC 840 — Manual refund authorized
The gap between TC 841 and TC 840 is where most frustration occurs.
What Happens Next?
Once TC 840 posts:
- A paper check is generated
- Mailing timelines apply
- Direct deposit is no longer used
There is no TC 846 for the reissued payment—the TC 840 is the payout command.
What You Should and Should Not Do
You Should:
- Verify your mailing address is current
- Monitor transcripts for TC 840
- Allow time for manual processing
You Should Not:
- Expect another direct deposit
- Refile the return
- Assume the refund was lost
A TC 841 followed by silence usually means the IRS is waiting to manually act.
The difference between Transaction Code 841 vs 840 is the difference between automation and human intervention.
- TC 841 means the bank rejected your refund
- The money is safe, but frozen in Credit Balance
- TC 840 is required to manually release it again
Once TC 840 posts, the refund is finally back on its way—this time by check.
