Your federal and state refunds are processed by completely separate systems on completely separate timelines. This guide tells you exactly where to check each one, what information you’ll need, why they’re delayed more often this season, and what to do when the tracker stops moving.
Your federal refund and your state refund are tracked in two different places. The IRS “Where’s My Refund” tool only shows your federal refund. It cannot see your state refund. Your state refund is tracked on your state’s own Department of Revenue or Franchise Tax Board website β a completely separate system. Most people check the IRS tool for both and then assume the state is delayed when it actually hasn’t been looked up at all. To check your state refund, you need your state’s specific tracker link, your SSN or ITIN, your filing status, and the exact dollar amount of your expected state refund. The direct official tracker links for the most-searched states are listed below.
Never use a third-party website to check your refund status. Always go directly to the official government site. The links below are for the most commonly searched states, plus the IRS federal tool.
Tool name: “Where’s My Refund?” β also available as the IRS2Go app (free on iPhone and Android)
Website: irs.gov/refunds
Phone (automated): 1-800-829-1954
What you need: SSN or ITIN · Filing status · Exact refund amount in whole dollars
Updates: Once every 24 hours, usually overnight β checking more often won’t change anything
E-file wait before checking: 24 hours · Paper return wait before checking: 4 weeks
| State | Official Tracker | E-File Wait | Paper Wait | Phone Number |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| California (CA) FTB | ftb.ca.gov/refund | 3β4 weeks | Up to 3 months | 800-852-5711 |
| Virginia (VA) | tax.virginia.gov (refund status) | 2β4 weeks | 8β12 weeks | 804-367-2486 |
| New York (NY) | tax.ny.gov (check refund) | 3 weeks | 6β8 weeks | 518-457-5149 |
| Texas (TX) | No state income tax β no state refund | N/A | N/A | 800-252-9121 |
| Florida (FL) | No state income tax β no state refund | N/A | N/A | 850-488-6800 |
| Illinois (IL) | mytax.illinois.gov (where’s my refund) | 3β5 weeks | 8β12 weeks | 800-732-8866 |
| Pennsylvania (PA) | mypath.pa.gov (where’s my refund) | 3β4 weeks | 6β8 weeks | 717-787-8201 |
| Ohio (OH) | tax.ohio.gov (check my refund) | 4β5 weeks | 10β12 weeks | 800-282-1780 |
| Georgia (GA) | georgia.gov/refund | 4β6 weeks Longer | 10β14 weeks | 877-423-6711 |
| North Carolina (NC) | ncdor.gov (where’s my refund) | 3β4 weeks | 8β10 weeks | 877-252-3052 |
| Michigan (MI) | michigan.gov/taxes (check my income tax) | 2β3 weeks | 6β8 weeks | 517-636-4486 |
| New Jersey (NJ) | njportal.com (income tax refund) | 4β12 weeks Varies | 12+ weeks | 609-292-6400 |
| Washington (WA) | No state income tax β no state refund | N/A | N/A | 360-705-6705 |
| Arizona (AZ) | aztaxes.gov (check refund) | 8 weeks | 10β12 weeks | 602-255-3381 |
| Massachusetts (MA) | mass.gov (check refund) | 4β6 weeks | 10β12 weeks | 617-887-6367 |
| Maryland (MD) | interactive.marylandtaxes.gov (refund) | 7β10 business days | 8β12 weeks | 410-260-7701 |
If you live in Texas, Florida, Washington, Nevada, South Dakota, Wyoming, Tennessee, New Hampshire, or Alaska, your state does not collect income tax. You will not file a state income tax return, and there is no state refund to track. Your only refund is the federal IRS refund, which you check at irs.gov/refunds.
The most common painful situations when waiting for a refund β the tracker that won’t update, the state refund that’s weeks behind the federal, the phone number that rings forever, the letter that showed up out of nowhere β are all covered below.
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I checked the IRS tool and it still says “Return Received” β what does that mean and how long should I wait? Your return is in queue but hasn’t been fully processed yet · Normal e-file: allow up to 21 days before worrying · If it’s been 21+ days with no change, something may need attentionThe IRS “Where’s My Refund” tool shows three stages: Return Received, Return Approved, and Refund Sent. Staying on “Return Received” for more than 21 calendar days after e-filing usually means the return has been flagged for additional review β not necessarily that something is wrong, but that a human needs to look at it. In the current filing season, reduced IRS staffing means that any return requiring manual handling is taking significantly longer than usual. The first thing to do: check your physical mail and email for a letter from the IRS. Identity verification letters (5071C, 4883C, 6331C) are the single most common reason for extended holds, and many people miss them because they assume it’s junk mail. Responding to that letter promptly β at idverify.irs.gov or by calling the number on the letter β is the single most effective action you can take. If no letter has arrived after 21 days of e-filing, you can call the IRS at 1-800-829-1040. Expect very long hold times.
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My federal refund already came, but my state refund still hasn’t arrived β is that normal? Completely normal and very common · State and federal processing are entirely separate systems · State refunds often arrive weeks after federal ones · Check your state’s own tracker β not the IRS toolThis confuses a lot of people every filing season. The IRS processes your federal return. Your state’s Department of Revenue (or Franchise Tax Board, in California) processes your state return. They share no systems, no data pipelines, and no timelines. Even though you may have filed both on the same day through the same tax software, the two agencies begin processing them independently. Federal refunds tend to arrive first because the IRS has invested more heavily in automated processing infrastructure. State agencies β particularly California, Illinois, New York, and Georgia β process higher volumes with older systems and often run 2β4 weeks behind the federal timeline. Use your state’s specific tracker link (listed in the table above) to check your state refund separately. The IRS tool cannot see or report on state refunds under any circumstances.
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How do I check my California (FTB) state refund? Go to ftb.ca.gov/refund · You need your SSN, mailing address numbers, ZIP code, and exact refund amount · E-file: allow 3β4 weeks before checking · Paper: allow up to 3 months · Phone: 800-852-5711California’s Franchise Tax Board (FTB) operates its own separate refund tracker at ftb.ca.gov/refund. You’ll need your Social Security Number or ITIN, the numbers in your mailing address (not the full address β just the number part), your ZIP code, and the exact whole-dollar amount of your expected refund exactly as it appears on your filed Form 540. The FTB processes e-filed returns in approximately 3 to 4 weeks during normal volume periods, though peak season (February through April) can extend that to 4 to 6 weeks. Paper returns can take up to 3 months. California refund checks expire 6 months after issue β if your check is lost or has been sitting unopened, contact the FTB promptly. For more account detail β including viewing notices the FTB may have sent you β you can create a free MyFTB account at ftb.ca.gov. This is especially useful if you’re not sure whether the FTB has sent you a letter requesting additional information.
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Where’s my Virginia state refund? Track at tax.virginia.gov · Requires SSN and exact refund amount · E-file: 2β4 weeks · Paper: 8β12 weeks · Phone: 804-367-2486Virginia’s Department of Taxation runs its refund status tool at tax.virginia.gov β look for “Where’s My Refund” in the top navigation or search bar. You’ll need your Social Security Number and the exact dollar amount of your expected refund. E-filed Virginia returns with direct deposit typically process within 2 to 4 weeks. Paper returns take considerably longer β plan for 8 to 12 weeks. Virginia does not allow you to check status until at least 4 weeks after filing. If the status shows “Under Review,” it means the department needs additional time and may mail you a letter. Don’t file a second return β that creates duplicate filing errors that cause much longer delays. If you’ve been waiting longer than the published window with no status change, call the Virginia tax refund hotline at 804-367-2486. Average hold times during peak season can be 30β60 minutes, so calling midweek in the early morning gives the best chance of a shorter wait.
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My state refund was less than I expected β why? Three common reasons: the state corrected a math error and adjusted your amount · your refund was offset to pay a debt (child support, student loans, unpaid taxes) · or the state changed a credit you claimedA refund that arrives smaller than expected is jarring, and the reason isn’t always communicated clearly by the tracker. The three most common causes are: a math correction (the state recalculated your return and found a smaller balance due to you), a debt offset (the state applied all or part of your refund to an outstanding balance β this could be unpaid state taxes, child support, defaulted student loans, or even a prior-year overpayment on unemployment benefits), or a disallowed credit (you claimed a credit you didn’t qualify for and the state removed it). In all three cases, the state is required to mail you a notice explaining the change. This notice goes to the address on your tax return. If you’ve moved since filing, or if you’ve been throwing away official-looking mail, that’s likely why you don’t know the reason. Check your mail carefully β the notice will show the exact calculation. If you believe the adjustment was wrong, you have the right to appeal, which the notice will explain. Timelines to respond vary by state, but acting within 30 days is always the safest approach.
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What’s the phone number for “where’s my state refund” β and is it worth calling? Each state has its own phone number · IRS federal: 1-800-829-1954 (automated) or 1-800-829-1040 (live agent) · Most state refund lines have automated systems that give the same information as the website · Calling before the processing window closes rarely helpsPhone lines for both the IRS and state tax agencies are often very busy during filing season, and hold times of 45 minutes to 2 hours for live agents are common. The most important thing to know: the automated IRS refund hotline at 1-800-829-1954 gives you exactly the same information as the website tool β so if you’ve already checked online, calling the automated line won’t add anything. A live IRS agent (1-800-829-1040) can see your full account but cannot manually expedite your refund or move it up in the queue. The information agents have access to is the same information shown on the Where’s My Refund tool. The situations where calling a live agent is genuinely useful: your tracker shows “Return Received” for more than 21 days after e-filing, you received a letter and need to understand what it’s asking, or your refund shows “Sent” but never arrived. State agency phone numbers are listed in the table above for each state. Early morning calls on Tuesdays through Thursdays tend to have shorter hold times than Monday mornings or days immediately before and after holidays.
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I got a letter from the IRS or my state β what should I do? Open it immediately and read it carefully · IRS identity letters (5071C, 4883C, 6331C): respond at idverify.irs.gov within the stated deadline · Math error notices: review and respond if you disagree · Ignoring a letter extends the delay significantlyAn official letter from the IRS or your state tax agency about your refund is one of the most time-sensitive pieces of mail you’ll receive all year. Many people delay opening it or set it aside, not realizing that every week they wait extends the hold on their refund. Identity verification letters are the most common type sent during refund delays. The IRS sends letter 5071C, 4883C, or 6331C asking you to verify your identity before the refund is released. You can respond online at idverify.irs.gov (often the fastest method) or by calling the number printed on the letter. Do not call the main IRS line β call the specific number on the letter. State agencies send similar verification requests to their own state-specific portal. For math error notices, the agency has already adjusted your refund β the letter explains why. If you agree, no action is needed. If you disagree, the letter explains how to dispute the change, and acting quickly within the response window is essential. The National Taxpayer Advocate reports that identity theft cases left unresponded are taking the IRS well over a year to resolve β while a timely response can clear things up in weeks.
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My refund says “Sent” but the money hasn’t shown up in my bank β what happened? Direct deposit: allow 1β5 business days after “Sent” status appears · If it’s been more than 5 days: check bank account number on your return · Wrong account = IRS will issue a paper check (4 additional weeks) · Lost paper check: call 1-800-829-1954 for a traceA status of “Refund Sent” means the IRS has released the funds β but there’s still a gap between that and money in your account. For direct deposit, banks typically post the funds within 1 to 5 business days of the IRS transmission date. If it’s been more than 5 business days and nothing has arrived, check the bank account number and routing number you entered on your return. A single wrong digit routes your refund to the wrong account entirely β and recovering misdirected direct deposits is a slow, paperwork-heavy process. If the bank rejects the deposit (because the account is closed or the name doesn’t match), the IRS issues a paper check to your address on file, which adds another 3 to 4 weeks. For a paper check that was expected but never arrived, you can request a refund trace by calling 1-800-829-1954 or completing IRS Form 3911. For state paper checks, contact your state’s Department of Revenue directly using the numbers in the table above. California FTB refund checks expire after 6 months β don’t let them sit uncashed.
Use the buttons below to find IRS Taxpayer Assistance Centers, local tax preparers who can help with refund issues, and free VITA tax help sites near you. Buttons use your location to update the map below.
- Do not file your return a second time. Duplicate filings create conflicting records that require manual resolution and can add months to your wait.
- Do not call the IRS before the processing window has passed. The agent’s screen shows the same information as the online tracker β calling early won’t move your return forward.
- Do not respond to any text message, email, or social media message claiming to be the IRS. The real IRS only contacts taxpayers by U.S. mail. Any other form of IRS contact is a scam.
- Do not pay anyone who claims they can speed up your IRS refund for a fee. No third party has the ability to expedite IRS or state processing. This is always a scam.
- Do not ignore mail from the IRS or your state tax agency. Every week you delay responding to a letter extends the hold on your refund. Open all tax agency mail immediately.
- Step 1: Confirm the full processing window has passed. Federal e-file: 21 days. Paper: 10β14 weeks in the current season. State: see the table above for your specific state.
- Step 2: Check the correct tracker for your refund type. Federal = irs.gov/refunds. State = your state’s Department of Revenue website (linked in the table above).
- Step 3: Check all your mail β physical and email β for any notice from the IRS or state. Identity verification letters are the most common cause of holds and the fastest to resolve when you respond quickly.
- Step 4: If you received an identity letter, respond immediately at idverify.irs.gov or by calling the number on the specific letter β not the main IRS line.
- Step 5: If the window has passed and no letter has arrived, call IRS at 1-800-829-1040 for federal, or your state’s direct line for state refunds. Ask for the status and whether any notices have been generated on your account.
- Step 6: If you’ve experienced significant financial hardship because of the delay, contact the Taxpayer Advocate Service at 1-877-777-4778 or taxpayeradvocate.irs.gov. This free government office exists specifically for situations like this.
This guide is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or financial advice. Refund processing times and tool links are accurate as of the date of publication and subject to change. Always verify information directly on official government websites (.gov). This page has no affiliation with the IRS, any state tax authority, or any tax preparation company.