A stimulus check may have missed you — for these reasons
A stimulus check may have missed you — for these reasons
A stimulus check may have missed you — for these reasons

The IRS has so far distributed at least 165 million of the pandemic's third stimulus checks, worth up to $1,400 each. The tax agency says Americans have received roughly $388 billion in direct relief payments from the $1.9 trillion COVID rescue package that President Joe Biden signed into law in mid-March.

But none of that is any comfort if you're still stuck in an agonizing wait for your money — and are eager to use it to pay bills, reduce your debt, save or invest.

Speculation is heating up over a possible fourth stimulus check, but that doesn't mean much either if you still haven't received No. 3 — or the first check (for $1,200) or the second ($600), for that matter. Here are seven reasons a stimulus payment may have missed you.

1. The stimulus checks are going out in 'batches'

Extreme close-up of Federal coronavirus stimulus check.
William Sawalich / Shutterstock

The IRS has been doing a colossal bit of multitasking — up to its eyeballs in both tax returns and the millions of stimulus checks.

Rather than completely overwhelm itself and risk creating an ugly backlog of payments, the tax agency has opted to deliver the stimulus funds in batches.

The ninth batch, totaling $1.8 billion, were officially paid out to Americans on May 12. This latest wave of payments included nearly half a million direct deposits, plus approximately 460,000 paper checks that had to be mailed. Which takes more time.

2. You’re getting an actual check, or a debit card

Americans in line for direct deposits will almost surely receive their payments before those slated to get debit cards or good ol’ paper checks, which can take weeks to reach their intended recipients.

Not sure how your payment will be distributed? You can use the IRS "Get My Payment" tool to see how your money is being delivered and whether it has been sent.

If the tax people have you down to receive a check or debit card, be careful you don't accidentally throw away your envelope from the IRS. When the first $1,200 stimulus checks went out last year, some recipients mistook their mailed checks or debit cards for junk mail — and tossed them.

3. You moved or changed your bank account

Bundle of mail marked
John Abbate / Shutterstock

Moving can be a hectic time. Notifying the IRS of your new whereabouts may not have been at the top of your list of priorities when you were packing, but if you still haven’t updated your address with the agency, it will send your check to wherever it used to send your tax refunds.

And if the IRS has indeed sent your payment to an old address, the check will need to be reissued. Which will mean a longer wait.

Or, if you recently switched bank accounts, the IRS won’t have your new account information on file until you provide it. When you’re scheduled to receive a direct deposit and the IRS doesn’t know where to send it, you'll have to wait for a paper check or debit card to show up in the mail. And that could take weeks.