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I appreciate your skepticism, but there's actually solid reasoning behind why calling can help in certain situations: ⢠Some returns get flagged for manual review but then sit in queues without being assigned to reviewers ⢠Calling creates a case note in the system which can trigger assignment to a reviewer ⢠Returns with inquiries are sometimes prioritized to clear the case from the contact log ⢠Agents can sometimes identify specific holds that weren't communicated to the taxpayer ⢠In some cases, agents can release certain types of systemic holds during the call While not every call will expedite processing, there's enough evidence from tax professionals that calling can indeed help in situations like the OP described.
Be careful about assuming calling always fixes these issues. Last year my cousin called about his delayed refund and ended up triggering a full review of his return. What started as a simple processing delay turned into a 3-month ordeal where they questioned his dependents and business expenses. Sometimes poking the bear can backfire! If your return has anything unusual or complicated, sometimes it's better to just wait it out rather than drawing attention to it.
I work with tax resolution cases and can provide some insight on the Amended Return Processing Pipeline (ARPP). Your verification this morning will trigger what's called a TC 971 (Transaction Code 971) on your account, which indicates verification has been completed. From there, your case enters the Accounts Management Review queue with priority code 3, since it's a verified amendment. The 9-week timeframe includes several processing benchmarks: initial review (1-2 weeks), substantiation verification (2-3 weeks), adjustment calculation (1 week), and final quality review (1-2 weeks). The remaining time accounts for system processing and refund issuance if applicable. Based on current processing volumes, you're looking at a completion date in early June.
Have you considered what the verification actually does to your timeline? Many people think verification speeds things up, but does it really? In my experience with three amended returns over the years, the verification process is actually just the starting point for the 9-week clock. What matters more is whether your amendment changes your refund amount significantly. Small changes tend to process faster than large ones. Have you checked your account transcript online to see if the verification has been recorded yet? That's the real indicator that your 9-week clock has started.
Good point! I should've mentioned this in my earlier comment. You can actually check if your verification was processed by looking for a specific code on your transcript. When I went through this, my transcript updated about 48 hours after my verification appointment with a TC 971 code, which meant the clock had officially started.
It appears that, in many cases, there might be a processing delay that is somewhat specific to Credit Karma and similar prepaid card options. Based on my research, the IRS typically initiates the ACH transfer within approximately 24 hours of the "refund sent" status appearing, but financial institutions like Credit Karma may have internal holding periods that can, unfortunately, extend the wait time by potentially 2-5 business days. This is sometimes related to fraud prevention measures, particularly for tax refunds which are frequently targeted by identity thieves.
I've seen this exact pattern the last three years. In 2022, I waited 4 days. In 2023, it was 3 days. This year it was still 3 days. What's interesting is that the first year I called and complained, the second year I didn't, and the timeline was basically the same. I think they have a standard hold period regardless of customer complaints.
This is incredibly helpful information. I wish they would clearly disclose these holding periods before people select them as a refund option. Do you know if there's any official documentation from Credit Karma about these policies? I've been searching their website but can't find anything specific about tax refund processing times.
I might be able to provide some insight on this issue, though your experience may vary somewhat. I've used Credit Karma for my refunds for the past two tax seasons, and I've noticed that there seems to be a consistent pattern where funds typically take approximately 2-3 business days to appear after the IRS shows the refund as sent. While this delay is certainly frustrating when you're waiting for important funds, I've found that the money does eventually appear without requiring any action on my part.
Did you receive any notifications when the money was about to be deposited? I'm wondering if there are any signs to watch for that indicate the funds are about to be released.
Did they give you any specific verification code or confirmation number when you completed the in-person verification? Last time I went through this in 2023, they gave me a confirmation number that I could reference when checking on status updates. Also, what specific forms did you have to bring to your verification appointment? I remember the requirements changed recently.
The community wisdom on this is pretty consistent: the IRS always overestimates processing times to manage expectations. Most of us who've gone through in-person verification see updates within 2-4 weeks. The transcript typically updates before WMR, and checking once or twice a week is sufficient. Tuesday night/Wednesday morning and Friday morning are when most batch processing happens. If you hit 5 weeks with no movement, that's when you should start making calls.
Lourdes Fox
Have you tried the IRS International Taxpayer Service at 267-941-1000? They're open from 6:00 AM to 11:00 PM Eastern time. The average wait time is 47 minutes, but they're more helpful for non-resident cases. You'll need the exact rejection code (usually a 3-digit number) from the rejection notice. For foreign taxpayers, rejection code 506 means ITIN issues, 507 means treaty benefits documentation, and 540 means foreign income verification problems. Print out Form 8948 and have it ready to discuss potential amendments.
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Bruno Simmons
I'm so happy to share that I finally got through to the IRS after dealing with a similar rejection for my mother-in-law! It was such a relief! The secret was calling their Taxpayer Advocate Service and explaining that this was creating a financial hardship AND had potential immigration implications. They prioritized our case and assigned us a specific advocate who called back within 2 days! We discovered the rejection was just because her name format didn't match their records exactly - her middle name was included on her ITIN but we didn't use it on the return. Such a simple fix but impossible to know without talking to someone!
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