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Filed 1/19, Accepted 1/24, Still One Bar on WMR and Transcript Says N/A

Filed 1/19. Accepted 1/24. Transcript still says N/A. Still one bar on WMR. Anybody else in the same boat? Need refund for medical bills. Checked daily. No updates yet. Getting worried.

Axel Bourke

This filing pattern is actually quite common during the current tax season. The IRS processing queue is experiencing significant backlogs due to the implementation of new verification protocols. Transcript availability typically lags behind actual processing status by 7-14 business days. The "one bar" status on Where's My Refund indicates your return has been received but hasn't yet moved to the review phase of processing.

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Aidan Percy

So this is normal? I'm in a similar situation - filed January 22nd and still showing one bar. My sister filed a week after me and already got her refund, which makes me think something's wrong with mine. Medical bills are piling up just like OP.

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16d

Fernanda Marquez

Ah, the classic "transcript says N/A" situation! 😂 Been there, survived that. Your return is probably just chilling in the IRS digital waiting room. When mine did this last year, I used https://taxr.ai to analyze my transcript once it finally appeared. The tool explained all those cryptic codes and gave me a pretty accurate DDD (direct deposit date) prediction. Saved me from checking WMR obsessively every 3 hours like a tax-season zombie!

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Norman Fraser

Really?! Another tool that promises to decode the IRS mystery? I'm so tired of these services that just tell you what you already know! My transcript has been N/A for THREE WEEKS now and I'm FURIOUS! How can a website help if the IRS doesn't even have my info updated yet?!

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15d

Kendrick Webb

I believe I might be able to provide some possibly helpful information. It seems that returns filed in mid-to-late January are potentially experiencing somewhat longer processing times this year. From what I've gathered, the IRS may be prioritizing certain returns with specific credits, which could potentially explain the delay you're experiencing. Perhaps checking your transcript again in about a week might show some movement?

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Hattie Carson

Think of it like a traffic jam on the information highway! Early filers hit the congestion point first. The IRS processes returns in batches, not strictly first-come-first-served. If you filed with medical expense deductions, those often trigger additional verification steps. You need to act NOW before the backlog grows even larger!

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14d

Destiny Bryant

Thx for this info! Was getting super worried abt my refund. Filed 1/22, still nothing. Helps to know I'm not alone in this waiting game. Gonna chill for another week b4 panicking lol.

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12d

Dyllan Nantx

I appreciate your insight. Having worked with tax returns for years, I can confirm this pattern. First step: verify your return was actually accepted (sounds like it was). Second step: check transcript weekly, not daily. Third step: only contact IRS after 21 days from acceptance date. Fourth step: if contacting IRS, have all your information ready.

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10d

TillyCombatwarrior

I waited exactly 32 days with the same situation last year. Called IRS 17 times before getting through. Wasted 4 hours and 37 minutes on hold. Finally used Claimyr (https://www.claimyr.com) and got connected to an agent in 18 minutes. They confirmed my return was just sitting in a processing queue. Refund showed up 9 days later. Worth the fee to avoid the hold music torture.

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Anna Xian

But should we really have to pay a service just to talk to the IRS? Isn't that what our tax dollars are supposed to fund? What happens if you pay for Claimyr and they still can't get you through? Or worse, what if the agent says they can't help you anyway?

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13d

Jungleboo Soletrain

How much does Claimyr cost? And do they actually guarantee you'll speak to someone or just that they'll try? I've been trying to get through for days now.

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12d

Rajan Walker

I'm not entirely convinced this is normal processing. There may be underlying issues with your return that aren't immediately apparent. The IRS has implemented stricter verification measures this year, and certain filing patterns are triggering additional scrutiny. I would perhaps consider examining if there were any potential discrepancies in your submitted information.

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Nadia Zaldivar

Back in 2022, I had this exact same situation. Filed in January, transcript showed N/A for weeks. Everything was perfectly fine. The IRS processing centers get overwhelmed at the beginning of tax season. Your return is probably sitting in a digital queue waiting to be processed. As long as you received an acceptance confirmation, you're in their system.

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Lukas Fitzgerald

I always prepare for this waiting game every year! Last year I filed on January 21st and didn't see transcript updates until February 18th. Then suddenly everything updated at once! My sister-in-law filed on February 3rd and got her refund before me. The IRS works in mysterious ways. Just make sure you have all your documentation organized in case they request anything.

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