Which Comes First, Federal or State Refund?
Short Answer: Federal tax refunds are processed and issued first in most cases. State tax refunds follow independently, based on each state’s own tax agency processing timelines. There is no required order—the two systems operate completely separately.
If you’re expecting both a federal and state refund, you may wonder which one arrives first. The short answer: federal almost always processes faster, but the two are entirely independent systems.
Federal Processing Timeline
The IRS processes federal tax returns and issues refunds through the Return Review & Processing (RRP) system. Standard processing for e-filed returns is typically 7-10 business days for direct deposit refunds, with a maximum of 21 calendar days stated as the IRS service standard.
In peak filing seasons (February–April), processing times may extend. Paper filers should expect 6-8 weeks minimum.
Key federal refund data (2024 filing season):
- Direct deposit average: 8 days
- Paper check by mail average: 6 weeks
- Complex returns (EITC, CTC): May take up to 15-21 days additional verification
State Tax Refund Processing
Each of the 41 states with an income tax runs its own processing system, completely independent of the IRS. Processing times vary dramatically:
- Fastest states: Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana (~5-7 days e-filed)
- Average states: California, New York, Texas (~4-6 weeks)
- Slowest states: Connecticut, Louisiana, South Carolina (8-12+ weeks)
State processing delays are common in the months following the April deadline when volume peaks. Some states have no income tax (Florida, Texas, Washington, Nevada, South Dakota) and therefore issue no state tax refunds.
The Systems Are Fully Independent
One important point: your federal and state refunds have no impact on each other. The IRS does not notify state tax agencies when it issues your federal refund, and states do not coordinate timing. You will receive either confirmation from your state tax agency separately.
However, if you owe federal taxes, the IRS can offset (garnish) your state tax refund to collect the debt—this is called a tax refund offset. Conversely, some states will offset your state refund to collect owed child support, student loans, or other state debts.
What If State Refund Comes Before Federal?
It occasionally happens that a fast-state processes and issues your state refund before your federal refund arrives. This is fine—it doesn’t affect your federal return. Simply report your state refund as income on your federal return if required (only if you itemized deductions and deducted state income taxes paid).
Key Takeaways
Federal and state refunds operate independently with no mandated order. Federal is almost always faster. State processing times vary widely by state. Neither system accelerates the other. To track your federal refund, use the IRS “Where’s My Refund?” tool at irs.gov. To track your state refund, visit your state tax agency website directly. Most state agencies have their own tracking portals.