Average Tax Refunds Jump by Nearly 11 Percent, Early IRS Data Show

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act brought widespread changes in the tax code, including an increase in the standard deductions.
Average Tax Refunds Jump by Nearly 11 Percent, Early IRS Data Show
A sign outside the Internal Revenue Service building in Washington. Patrick Semansky/AP Photo
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The Internal Revenue Service is taking longer to process tax refunds than it did a year ago, but the average size of refund checks that have already been issued to taxpayers is up by nearly 11 percent from those received through the same period in 2025.

Early individual taxpayer refunds are moving sluggishly because of the PATH Act, which required the IRS to hold tax returns from filers who claimed the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) or the Additional Child Tax Credit (ACTC) until Feb. 15, the federal tax agency said in a statement on Feb. 13.
Rob Sabo
Rob Sabo
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Rob Sabo has worked as a business journalist for nearly two decades and covers a broad range of business topics for The Epoch Times.