INSIGHTi
Delivery of Economic Impact Payments (EIPs)
Updated June 10, 2020
To mitigate the financial hardship many Americans are experiencing during the coronavirus pandemic,
Congress passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act (P.L. 116-136). A
critical element of the aid package is direct payments to certain individuals in 2020. The payments are
referred to as “recovery rebates” in Section 2201 of the act, but the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) cal s
them “economic impact payments” (EIPs) in the notices it shares with the general public. To qualify for a
full EIP, an individual’s adjusted gross income (AGI) in 2019 cannot exceed $75,000 (or $150,000 for
married couples filing jointly). The payment phases out for AGIs between $75,000 and $98,000 for single
filers, and between $150,000 and $198,000 for joint filers.
For more information on these payments, see CRS Insight IN11282, COVID-19 and Direct Payments to
Individuals: Summary of the 2020 Recovery Rebates/Economic Impact Payments in the CARES Act (P.L.
116-136).
This Insight presents a brief overview of the delivery of EIPs and identifies factors that might affect the
timing and accuracy of their delivery.
Delivery of Payments
The IRS is administering the EIP program, with assistance from the Treasury Department’s Bureau of the
Fiscal Service. In doing so, it has drawn on its experience in administering a similar payment program
established by the Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 (ESA, P.L. 110-185).
The CARES Act provided the IRS with $500.7 mil ion to implement the program; the funds are available
until September 30, 2021. By contrast, Congress appropriated $270 mil ion for the IRS to implement the
2008 stimulus payments.
The IRS is issuing EIPs to three categories of taxpayers:
eligible individuals who filed a return in 2019 (or in 2018 if no return for 2019 is filed
before payments are disbursed);
eligible individuals who did not file a return for either year but who received Social
Security benefits, Railroad Retirement (RR) benefits, Supplemental Security Income, or
certain Veterans Administration benefits in 2019; and
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al other eligible individuals who filed no return for either year and received none of the
benefits listed in the previous category; these individuals are often referred to as
nonfilers.
Taxpayers in the first category automatical y receive a payment. Those who provided bank account
information to the IRS in 2019 or 2018 are to receive a payment via direct deposit. Some individuals who
filed their 2018 or 2019 returns with the help of a tax return preparation firm such as Intuit or H&R Block
and received a refund anticipation loan may experience a delay in getting their payment via direct deposit.
Taxpayers in the first category who did not provide bank account information to the IRS are to receive a
check in the mail. Tens of mil ions of taxpayers could be in this position. According to the National
Taxpayer Advocate, 41% of filers (or 64 mil ion individuals) for the 2018 tax year did not provide bank
account information on their return. To speed up delivery to such taxpayers, the IRS created an online
application cal ed Get My Payment. It al ows individuals to track the status of their payment and provide
direct deposit information.
Taxpayers in the second category also receive a payment automatical y, even if they did not file a return
for 2018 or 2019 and provide no other information to the IRS. Providing the IRS with direct deposit
information through Get My Payment could speed up its delivery.
Taxpayers in the third category must register with the IRS to get a payment. This group is among the
estimated 6 mil ion people who do not have to file because their income is below the filing threshold. To
expedite the registration process, the IRS has launched an online tool (Nonfilers: Enter Payment Info Here
page at IRS.gov), where nonfilers can enter the required information. Persons in this category have until
October 15 to provide the IRS with the information needed to receive a payment.
The IRS announced on May 18 that it soon would begin distributing EIPs via debit cards to the 4 mil ion
persons who have no bank account information on file with the IRS and whose latest tax return was
processed at IRS’s service centers in Austin, TX, or Andover, MA. Some taxpayers in the second and
third categories could benefit from this delivery option.
Factors That May Affect the Delivery of EIPs
It took the IRS about 10 weeks to start distributing the 2008 ESA stimulus payments after enactment of
the ESA. By the end of 2008, the IRS had delivered nearly 143 mil ion payments worth a total of $107.3
bil ion. By contrast, the IRS began delivering the first round of EIPs 15 days after enactment of the
CARES Act. By June 3, the IRS had delivered over 159 mil ion payments totaling $267 bil ion; 120
mil ion payments (or 75%) were delivered via direct deposit, 35 mil ion (or 22%) as paper checks, and 4
mil ion as prepaid debit cards. (As a point of reference, the Ways and Means Committee estimated at the
outset of the EIP program that between 150 mil ion and 170 mil ion taxpayers would receive payments,
and that the IRS would need to obtain information from 90 mil ion to 110 mil ion of them to deliver
payments via direct deposit or a paper check.)
There are several factors that could affect the timing and accuracy of IRS’s future distribution of EIPs.
One factor is the size of IRS’s workforce. It is 20% smal er today than it was when the IRS administered
the 2008 stimulus payments. With this reduced workforce, the IRS is processing 2019 tax returns (which
are due by July 15) while implementing the EIP program. Even al owing for an increase in overal
productivity between 2008 and today, the agency may find it difficult to deliver EIPs to eligible taxpayers
for whom it has no bank account information or a current mailing address.
Another factor is the current status of the IRS workforce. In mid-March, to protect employees and
taxpayers from contracting the coronavirus, the agency closed its Taxpayer Assistance Centers and
reduced taxpayer phone service. Then on March 30, IRS managers ordered employees who could work
remotely to do so immediately. It is unclear how teleworking is affecting the EIP program. Although
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some employees returned to their offices in late April, there is concern that remaining critical work for the
program cannot be done in a timely manner by employees stil working from home. To increase phone
assistance for taxpayers with questions about their EIP, the IRS announced on May 18 that 3,500 phone
operators have been recal ed.
Some are concerned that a shortage of IRS employees with a good working knowledge of COBOL—the
programming language for IRS’s core information systems since the early 1960s—might also slow the
timing of EIP delivery to certain taxpayers. If the IRS wants to hire more programmers to help implement
the EIP program, finding qualified candidates may prove a chal enge.
Yet another factor is the IRS’s seeming reliance on the internet to provide needed information and a
mechanism for low-income nonfilers to receive a payment. At the moment, many nonfilers may have
trouble accessing the internet, owing to the pandemic. Places where they normal y may get access, such
as public libraries and volunteer taxpayer assistance centers, are closed in many communities. These
closures may make it difficult for many of them to provide the needed information before the end of the
year, when the EIP program expires. Eligible persons who receive no payment this year wil have to wait
until they file their 2020 to return to receive a comparable benefit.
Author Information
Gary Guenther
Analyst in Public Finance
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan shared staff
to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and under the direction of
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IN11393 · VERSION 3 · UPDATED