Politics & Government

IRS Seeks to Return $153 Million in Undelivered Checks to Taxpayers

The department Rrecommends people e-file or direct deposit to avoid future delivery problems.

Hey Canon-McMillan residents: In an annual reminder to taxpayers, the Internal Revenue Service announced this week  that it is looking to return $153.3 million in undelivered tax refund checks.

In all, 99,123 taxpayers are due refund checks this year that couldn't be delivered because of mailing address errors.

Undelivered refund checks average $1,547 this year.

Find out what's happening in Canon-Mcmillanfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Taxpayers who believe their refund check may have been returned to the IRS as undelivered should use the Where's My Refund? tool on IRS.gov. 

The tool will provide the status of their refund and, in some cases, instructions on how to resolve delivery problems.

Find out what's happening in Canon-Mcmillanfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Taxpayers checking on a refund over the phone will receive instructions on how to update their addresses. Taxpayers can access a telephone version of Where’s My Refund? by calling 1-800-829-1954.

While only a small percentage of checks mailed out by the IRS are returned as undelivered, taxpayers can put an end to lost, stolen or undelivered checks by choosing direct deposit when they file either paper or electronic returns this year.

Last year, more than 78.4 million taxpayers chose to receive their refund through direct deposit. Taxpayers can receive refunds directly into their bank accounts, split a tax refund into two or three financial accounts or even buy a savings bond.

The IRS also recommends that taxpayers file their tax returns electronically, because e-file eliminates the risk of lost paper returns. E-file also reduces errors on tax returns and speeds up refunds.

The public should be aware that the IRS does not contact taxpayers by e-mail to alert them of pending refunds and does not ask for personal or financial information through email. 

Such messages are common phishing scams

The agency urges taxpayers receiving such messages not to release any personal information, reply, open any attachments or click on any links to avoid malicious code that can infect their computers. 

The best way for an individual to verify if she or he has a pending refund is going directly to IRS.gov and using the Where’s My Refund? tool.   

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