Refund Anticipation Loan: Guide To Costs, Risks, Alternatives

Understand refund anticipation loans: quick cash against your tax refund, but with high fees and risks involved.

By Sneha Tete, Integrated MA, Certified Relationship Coach
Created on

Refund Anticipation Loan

A refund anticipation loan (RAL) is a short-term loan offered by third-party lenders, typically through tax preparation services, that provides taxpayers with immediate cash based on their anticipated IRS tax refund. These loans bridge the gap between filing taxes and receiving the actual refund, often delivering funds in as little as 24 hours, but they come with significant fees, high effective interest rates, and potential risks if the refund is smaller than expected.

What is a Refund Anticipation Loan?

Refund anticipation loans, also known as RALs, allow individuals to borrow against their expected federal or state income tax refund. The loan amount is usually a portion of the projected refund minus fees for tax preparation, loan origination, and other services. Once the IRS issues the refund, it is directly deposited into the lender’s account to repay the loan principal, interest, and fees.

Historically, RALs gained popularity with the rise of electronic tax filing in the 1990s, reducing refund wait times from months to weeks. Tax preparers would submit returns, receive IRS confirmation of no errors or liens, and issue a check or prepaid card for the loan amount. However, concerns over high costs and fraud led to changes, including the IRS discontinuing early refund indicators in 1994 (briefly reinstated in 1995).

Today, RALs are less common due to faster IRS direct deposit options (often 21 days or less for e-filed returns), but they persist for those needing immediate funds, particularly low-income filers or those with urgent bills.

How Does a Refund Anticipation Loan Work?

The process for obtaining an RAL is integrated into tax preparation services:

  • Tax Preparation: Visit a tax preparer (e.g., H&R Block, Liberty Tax) or use their software. They calculate your expected refund based on your return.
  • Loan Application: If eligible, apply for the RAL. Approval depends on the projected refund size, your credit (sometimes minimally checked), and no outstanding debts offset by the IRS.
  • Funds Disbursement: Receive cash, check, or prepaid debit card—often same-day or next-day—typically 50-100% of the expected refund minus fees.
  • Repayment: IRS direct deposits refund into a temporary account held by the lender’s bank. Loan is repaid automatically; any shortfall becomes your debt at high interest (up to 36% APR in some states).

Related products include refund anticipation checks (RACs), which aren’t loans but temporary accounts where the IRS deposits the refund, and the preparer issues a check minus fees after a short hold. RACs avoid interest but still incur processing fees.

Comparison: RAL vs. RAC vs. Direct Deposit
OptionSpeedCostRisk
RAL24 hoursHigh fees + interest (e.g., $30-100+)Debt if refund short
RAC1-2 weeksFees ($20-60)Low, but fees deducted
Direct Deposit21 days avg.FreeNone

Refund Anticipation Loan Fees

RALs are notoriously expensive. Fees break down as follows:

  • Tax Preparation Fee: $100-300+, cannot be contingency-based on refund size per IRS rules.
  • Loan Origination/Processing: $30-75 average in 2004; now often $50-100.
  • Bank Account Setup: For temporary accounts, ~$20-40.
  • Interest/Finance Charges: Short-term but equate to 100-400% APR historically; capped at 36% in states like Illinois.

Example: For a $1,000 refund, a $30 e-file fee + $59 loan fee yielded ~250% APR in 1995. Modern estimates: Total costs can eat 10-20% of the refund. Cross-collection fees apply if prior RAL debts exist, where new lenders offset old ones from your refund.

Pros and Cons of RALs

Pros

  • Immediate access to funds for emergencies, bills, or debt payoff.
  • Convenient one-stop tax prep + cash.
  • No traditional credit check for many; secured by refund.

Cons

  • High Costs: Fees often exceed benefits, especially for small refunds.
  • Refund Shortfall Risk: If IRS issues less (e.g., audit, offset for debts), you owe the difference plus interest.
  • Debt Cycle: Targets low-income users; encourages repeat use.
  • Offsets: IRS may seize for back taxes, child support, student loans before lender repayment.

U.S. Treasury data shows RAL/RAC users are disproportionately low-income, minority, and female-headed households, with average refunds ~$2,200 but high fee burdens.

Are Refund Anticipation Loans Worth It?

For most, no. With IRS direct deposit averaging 21 days (faster for e-filing), free options suffice. RALs suit only dire needs where speed outweighs 10-30% effective costs. CFPB advises comparing total fees and considering alternatives like payday loan avoidance. SmartAsset notes risks amplify if refund < loan amount, leaving debt at 36%+ APR.

Refund Anticipation Loan Regulations

Federal oversight is limited; IRS bans contingency fees but not high RAL charges. States act:

  • Illinois: Caps RAL interest at 36%; bans security interests beyond refund, cross-collection.
  • Connecticut: Regulates loans repaid from refunds.
  • Seattle: Local rules define and oversee RALs/RACs.
  • Model Legislation: NCLC’s act limits fees, mandates disclosures.

Post-2010 banking changes reduced major RAL providers (e.g., Santa Barbara Bank exited), shrinking market.

Alternatives to Refund Anticipation Loans

  • Direct Deposit: Free, fast (e-file + direct deposit = 21 days avg.).
  • Refund Advance Loans: Some preparers offer no-fee advances (e.g., up to $500) repaid from refund.
  • Early Refund Products: Fee-based RACs without interest.
  • Savings/Budgeting: Build emergency fund to avoid high-cost loans.
  • Free File: IRS program for low-income filers avoids prep fees.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Q: Who qualifies for a refund anticipation loan?

A: Taxpayers with e-filed returns expecting $500+ refunds, minimal credit issues, no IRS offsets. Offered via preparers.

Q: How fast do you get money from an RAL?

A: Often 24 hours after approval, via check or card.

Q: What if my refund is smaller than the RAL?

A: You owe the difference plus interest/fees; lender pursues collection.

Q: Are RAL fees tax-deductible?

A: Tax prep fees yes (if itemizing), but loan fees/interest generally no.

Q: Can I get an RAL for state refunds?

A: Yes, but regulated separately; some states ban or cap.

References

  1. Refund anticipation loan – Wikipedia — Wikipedia. 2023-10-01. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refund_anticipation_loan
  2. Tax refund tips: Understanding refund advance loans and checks — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). 2023-01-10. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/about-us/blog/tax-refund-tips-understanding-refund-advance-loans-and-checks/
  3. What Is a Refund Anticipation Loan — SmartAsset. 2024-02-15. https://smartasset.com/taxes/what-is-a-refund-anticipation-loan
  4. Characteristics of Users of Refund Anticipation Loans and Refund Anticipation Checks — U.S. Department of the Treasury. 2011-12-01. https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/231/Characteristics-of-Users-of-Refund-Anticipation-Loans-and-Refund-Anticipation-Checks_0.pdf
  5. Illinois Compiled Statutes – Payday Loan Reform Act — Illinois General Assembly. 2013-01-01. https://www.ilga.gov/Legislation/ILCS/Articles?ActID=2320&ChapterID=67
  6. AN ACT CONCERNING INCOME TAX REFUND ANTICIPATION LOANS — Connecticut General Assembly. 2005-05-01. https://www.cga.ct.gov/2005/ba/2005SB-01365-R000617-BA.htm
  7. Revised Model Refund Anticipation Loan Act with Commentary — National Consumer Law Center (NCLC). 2022-06-15. https://www.nclc.org/resources/revised-model-refund-anticipation-loan-act-with-commentary/
Sneha Tete
Sneha TeteBeauty & Lifestyle Writer
Sneha is a relationships and lifestyle writer with a strong foundation in applied linguistics and certified training in relationship coaching. She brings over five years of writing experience to fundfoundary,  crafting thoughtful, research-driven content that empowers readers to build healthier relationships, boost emotional well-being, and embrace holistic living.

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