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CP53E notice: If you got a paper refund check from the IRS last year, read this

If you received a CP53E notice (or you got your refund by paper check in the last filing season), this is the update you don’t want to learn the hard way.

In past years, if your direct deposit failed—or if you didn’t want direct deposit—you could often default to a paper refund check and move on.

Now the IRS has started phasing out paper refund checks for individual taxpayers as part of Executive Order 14247. For most people, refunds are being pushed to electronic delivery (direct deposit or other approved electronic options), and the “paper check fallback” can mean delays and extra steps.

What changed (and what didn’t)

What changed:

  • The IRS began phasing out paper refund checks starting September 30, 2025.
  • Missing or rejected direct deposit can trigger a refund freeze and a required action step.

What didn’t change:

  • Your return can still be filed and processed. The refund is what gets held up if your delivery method isn’t workable.

Two situations that can freeze your refund

1) You file without direct deposit information

Your return can still be processed—but the IRS may temporarily freeze the refund until you provide direct deposit info (or request a paper check through the IRS process).

2) Your bank rejects the direct deposit

This can happen when the account is closed, the numbers don’t match, or the bank rejects the transaction. Under the new process, the IRS generally does not automatically reissue a rejected direct deposit as a paper check.

Translation: you need to be ready to act.

The CP53E notice: the 30-day clock you don’t want

If your refund is frozen, the IRS sends a CP53E notice.

Here’s the IRS explainer (bookmark it):

The key points:

  • You generally have 30 days from the date of the notice to take action.
  • You’ll be directed to use your IRS Online Account to add or update your bank information.
  • If you don’t respond, the IRS says it will issue a paper check after six weeks (which is slower than electronic delivery).

Important: you only get one shot to update your banking info

This is where people get burned.

Under the CP53E process:

  • You can add/update your bank info through your online account.
  • You only get one opportunity to do that.
  • If that direct deposit attempt is rejected, the IRS will issue a paper check—and you won’t get another round of “try again.”

“I don’t have a bank account.” What are your options?

The IRS has acknowledged that not everyone has traditional banking access. Depending on what’s available/approved, alternatives may include:

  • Direct deposit to certain prepaid debit cards
  • Mobile apps / digital wallets that support direct deposit-type routing/account details
  • Limited exceptions (case-by-case)

The practical takeaway: if you’re not using a traditional bank account, make sure your chosen option can actually receive an IRS refund electronically before you file.

Before you file: do this checklist (save yourself the headache)

If you got a paper check last year—or you’ve had direct deposit hiccups before—do this now:

✅ Confirm your routing number and account number are current
✅ Confirm the account is open and able to receive ACH deposits
✅ Set up (or access) your IRS Online Account so you can respond fast if anything flags
✅ If you changed banks recently, update your plan before filing
✅ If you use a prepaid card/digital wallet, confirm it supports the right deposit details

About 7% of individual refund recipients received their refunds by paper check in the most recent filing season. That’s millions of people who now need a cleaner system before they file.

Need help getting this handled correctly?

If you want this handled proactively—so you don’t lose weeks waiting on IRS process delays:

Schedule a Free Tax Strategy Session

Protecting your blind side,
Laura

This post is for general informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or accounting advice; consult your tax professional for guidance specific to your situation.


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