How refund interest works
Refund interest compensates taxpayers when the government holds an overpayment longer than federal law allows. The IRS computes interest automatically — you do not need to request it — and includes it with your refund when applicable. (See the IRS overview on refund interest for current rules and rates: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/refund-interest.)
Key rules and timing
- Start date: Interest accrues from the later of (a) the original due date of the return (without regard to extensions) or (b) the date you paid the tax overpayment.
- End date: Interest runs until the date the IRS actually issues the refund.
- Rate and compounding: Interest rates are set quarterly under federal tax law (IRC §6621), equal to the federal short-term rate plus a statutory add-on, and are compounded daily.
- Automatic payment: If you are due interest, the IRS adds it to your refund; you do not need to file a separate claim.
How the IRS calculates the dollar amount (simple example)
The IRS compounds daily for precision, but you can estimate interest with an annual-rate formula. Example: a $1,000 overpayment, IRS annual interest rate 5%, refund issued 9 months (0.75 year) later.
Estimated interest = $1,000 × 5% × 0.75 = $37.50 (the IRS daily-compounded figure will be very close to this).
Who qualifies and common exceptions
- Eligible: Any taxpayer (individual or business) who overpays federal tax and receives a refund after the statutory start date is generally entitled to interest.
- Reported refunds: Interest applies regardless of payment method (direct deposit, check) and is paid even when the refund results from filing an amended return, subject to timing rules.
- Taxable: Refund interest is taxable income and usually reported by the IRS on Form 1099-INT (see Form 1099-INT instructions: https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1099-int).
What to do if you think interest is missing
- Check the refund amount and any IRS offset notices (sometimes interest is reduced if your refund was offset to pay a federal or state debt). See our guide on refund offsets for options and prevention: How Tax Refund Offsets Work and Your Options to Prevent Them.
- Track processing delays that might affect timing and interest using the IRS “Where’s My Refund?” tool and read common causes in our article: What Can Delay a Tax Refund and How to Avoid Those Delays.
- If a refund (or its interest) is missing, follow the IRS trace procedures or file a claim; our step-by-step page on tracing missing refunds can help: Claiming a Missing Refund: Steps to Trace and Recover a Lost Tax Refund.
Practical tips
- File electronically and choose direct deposit to speed receipt of refunds and interest payments.
- Keep proof of payments and filed returns so you can document the overpayment date if you must question the IRS’s calculation.
- Expect the IRS to issue Form 1099-INT for reportable interest; include it on the following year’s tax return.
Common misconceptions
- “I must request refund interest.” No — the IRS calculates and pays it automatically when due.
- “Refund interest is tax-free.” No — it is taxable and typically reported on Form 1099-INT.
Sources and authority
- IRS — Refund Interest: https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/refund-interest
- IRS — About Form 1099-INT: https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-1099-int
Professional disclaimer: This article is educational and not personalized tax advice. For guidance tailored to your situation, consult a CPA or tax attorney.

