If you didn't get the full Economic Impact Payment, you may be eligible to claim the Recovery Rebate Credit. See Recovery Rebate Credit for more information. All Economic Impact Payments have been sent. To find the amount of Economic Impact Payments issued to you, see your Online Account. If you didn't get any payments or got less than the full amounts, you may qualify for the Recovery Rebate Credit . and must file a tax return to claim the credit even if you don't normally file. Q I1. What should I do to return an Economic Impact Payment (EIP) that was received as a direct deposit or a paper check? (updated September 27, 2021) A1. You should return the payment as described below. If the payment was a paper check: Write "Void" in the endorsement section on the back of the check. Mail the voided Treasury check immediately to the appropriate IRS location listed below. Don't staple, bend, or paper clip the check. Include a brief explanation stating the reason for returning the check. If the payment was a paper check and you have cashed it, or if the payment was a direct deposit: Submit a personal check, money order, etc., immediately to the appropriate IRS location listed below. Write on the check/money order made payable to “U.S. Treasury” and write 2020EIP, and the taxpayer identification number (social security number, or individual taxpayer identification number) of the recipient of the check. Include a brief explanation of the reason for returning the EIP. For your paper check, here are the IRS mailing addresses to use based on the state: If you live in… then mail to this address Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont Andover Internal Revenue Service 310 Lowell St. Andover, MA 01810 Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Virginia Atlanta Internal Revenue Service 4800 Buford Hwy Chamblee, GA 30341 Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Texas Austin Internal Revenue Service 3651 S Interregional Hwy 35 Austin, TX 78741 New York Brookhaven Internal Revenue Service 1040 Waverly Ave. Holtsville, NY 11742 Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, Wisconsin, Wyoming Fresno Internal Revenue Service 3211 S Northpointe Dr Fresno, CA 93725 Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, New Jersey, Ohio, West Virginia Kansas City Internal Revenue Service 333 W Pershing Rd. Kansas City, MO 64108 Alabama, North Carolina, North Dakota, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee Memphis Internal Revenue Service 5333 Getwell Rd. Memphis, TN 38118 District of Columbia, Idaho, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island Philadelphia Internal Revenue Service 2970 Market St. Philadelphia, PA 19104 A foreign country, U.S. possession or territory*, or use an APO or FPO address, or file Form 2555 or 4563, or are a dual-status alien. Austin Internal Revenue Service 3651 S Interregional Hwy 35 Austin, TX 78741 Q I2. How do I return an Economic Impact Payment (EIP) that was received as an EIP Card (debit card) if I don’t want the payment re-issued? (added January 6, 2021) A2. If you received your EIP as a debit card and want to return the money to the IRS and NOT have the payment re-issued, send the card along with a brief explanation stating you don’t want the payment and do not want the payment re-issued to: Money Network Cardholder Services 2900 Westside Parkway Alpharetta, GA 30004 Economic Impact Payment Topics Topic A: EIP Eligibility Topic B: Requesting My Economic Impact Payment Topic C: Calculating My Economic Impact Payment Topic D: Receiving My Payment Topic E: EIP Cards Topic F: Payment Issued but Lost, Stolen, Destroyed or Not Received Topic G: Non-Filers Tool Topic H: Social Security, Railroad Retirement and Department of Veteran Affairs benefit recipients Topic I: Returning the Economic Impact Payment Topic J: Reconciling on your 2020 tax return Topic K: General Information