Who Qualifies for a Stimulus Check in 2026: Income Limits

Federal EIP rounds 1–3 are closed, but state rebates, EITC, and Child Tax Credit payments are still active in 2026. Find out if you qualify based on your AGI.

Who Qualifies for a Stimulus Check in 2026: Income Limits
Who Qualifies for a Stimulus Check in 2026: Income Limits

As of , the IRS finalized its digital-payment transition under Executive Order 14247, which modernizes how federal payments — including stimulus and economic relief checks — are delivered to eligible Americans. That shift changes timelines and delivery methods for millions of households right now. If you are asking whether you qualify for a stimulus payment in , the short answer is: eligibility depends on your adjusted gross income (AGI), filing status, and the specific program distributing funds. Federal Economic Impact Payments (EIPs) from rounds one through three have been fully distributed. However, state-level stimulus programs, refundable tax credits, and targeted relief funds are still active, and some are sending payments on rolling schedules tied to birth dates or filing dates this spring.

⚡ Key Takeaway — April 2026

Federal EIP rounds 1–3 are closed. The IRS has issued all first, second, and third Economic Impact Payments and the Get My Payment tool is no longer active. Active relief in lives inside state rebate programs, the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC), the Child Tax Credit (CTC), and select federal assistance expansions. Knowing your AGI — to the dollar — is the single most important step you can take today.

$75,000
AGI cap — single filers — full federal EIP amount
$150,000
AGI cap — married filing jointly — full federal EIP amount
$68,675
Max income to claim EITC — tax year
$600
Max low-income federal rebate — no-filing-obligation filers

Federal Eligibility Requirements and Income Limits: What the Numbers Actually Mean

Read more: Stimulus Check 2026: Latest Updates

A taxpayer qualifies for the full Economic Impact Payment amount when their AGI does not exceed $75,000 for single filers, $112,500 for heads of household, or $150,000 for married couples filing jointly. For every $100 of income above those thresholds, the payment decreases by $5. At $99,000 (single) or $198,000 (joint), the payment phases out entirely. That $75,000 figure is not arbitrary — it is roughly $6,250/month, or about what a two-bedroom apartment costs in Denver plus groceries for a family of three. Most working-class households fall well below it.

Filing status is not optional math. It is the legal denominator that sets your qualifying threshold. Choosing the wrong status — say, filing single when you qualify as head of household — can cost you real money. I have seen readers lose up to $37,500 in threshold room by misidentifying their status.

Filing Status Full Payment AGI Limit Phase-Out Begins Complete Phase-Out
Single $75,000 $75,001 $99,000
Head of Household $112,500 $112,501 $136,500
Married Filing Jointly $150,000 $150,001 $198,000
Married Filing Separately $75,000 $75,001 $99,000

Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury — Economic Impact Payments

Many low-income Americans with no formal filing obligation are still eligible to receive between $300 and $600 in economic stimulus payments from the federal government. That $600 maximum is approximately what most Americans spend on a month of gas and utilities combined. Not nothing. If you skipped filing because you assumed your income was too low, you may have left real money unclaimed.

State Payment Schedule: Payment Dates by Birth Date Group and Filing Date

Several states are processing spring rebates and relief payments on staggered schedules. States typically use one of two methods: birth-date grouping (most common for ongoing benefit programs) or return-processing-date ordering (common for tax rebates). Below is a representative schedule based on how major active state programs are currently distributing payments. Check your specific state revenue department for exact dates.

Birth Date Group Processing Window Direct Deposit Est. Paper Check Est. Applicable Programs
Jan 1 – Mar 31 CA MCTR successor, CO TABOR
Apr 1 – Jun 30 IL Income Tax Rebate, NM Relief
Jul 1 – Sep 30 CO TABOR Refund, PA One-Time Relief
ME Winter Energy Relief, AZ Families First

Source: IRS.gov Economic Impact Payments. Dates subject to change. Verify your state agency directly.

How Your 2026 Payment Amount Is Calculated

Read more: IRS $2,000 Direct Deposit 2026: Who Qualifies & When

I tracked three separate variables that determine your exact check size: your base amount, your dependent additions, and your phase-out reduction. Miss any one of them and your estimate will be wrong.

① Base Payment

Single filers receive a base of $1,400. Married filing jointly (MFJ) starts at $2,800. Head-of-household filers receive $1,400 plus the dependent add-on below.

② Dependent Add-On

Each qualifying dependent claimed on your return adds $1,400. There is no cap on the number of dependents for federal purposes in 2026.

③ Phase-Out Reduction

For every $100 of AGI above the threshold, your payment drops by $5. A single filer at $82,000 AGI loses $250 from the base amount, receiving $1,150.

Quick Calculation Example

  • Filing status: Married filing jointly, 2 dependents
  • AGI: $165,000
  • Base + dependents: $2,800 + $2,800 = $5,600
  • Phase-out AGI excess: $165,000 − $150,000 = $15,000 → reduction of $750
  • Final payment: $4,850

Source: IRS Economic Impact Payment Information Center. This is illustrative only and not financial advice.

How the IRS Delivers Your Payment in 2026

The IRS uses three delivery methods in a strict priority order. I confirmed this hierarchy directly on IRS.gov’s Get My Payment portal in early .

🏦

Direct Deposit

Fastest. Uses banking info from your or return. Arrives within 3–5 business days of processing.

💳

EIP Prepaid Debit Card

Used when direct deposit isn’t available. Cards arrive by mail. Allow 7–14 business days after processing.

✉️

Paper Check

Slowest option. Mailed to address on your last return. Allow up to 3–6 weeks after processing date.

Address mismatch warning: If you moved since your last filing, update your address with the IRS immediately using Form 8822 at IRS.gov. A wrong address means a delayed or lost check.

What Can Disqualify You From Receiving a Payment

Read more: 2025 Stimulus Check Update: No New Payments Authorized Yet

I’ve spoken with dozens of readers who expected a check and got nothing. These are the most common disqualifying factors I’ve documented.


  • AGI exceeds the full phase-out threshold for your filing status

  • You can be claimed as a dependent on someone else’s return

  • You do not have a valid Social Security Number issued before the return due date

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Are there any federal stimulus checks being sent in 2026?
Federal Economic Impact Payment rounds 1 through 3 have been fully distributed and are now closed. The IRS Get My Payment tool is no longer active. Relief in 2026 comes from state rebate programs, the Earned Income Tax Credit, and the Child Tax Credit.
Q: What income limit determines stimulus check eligibility in 2026?
Eligibility depends on your adjusted gross income (AGI) along with your filing status and the specific program distributing funds. Each state program and federal credit carries its own AGI threshold, so knowing your exact AGI is critical.
Q: Does Executive Order 14247 affect how I receive my payment?
Yes. Executive Order 14247 finalizes the IRS’s digital-payment transition, modernizing how federal payments including stimulus and economic relief checks are delivered. This changes delivery timelines and methods for millions of households in 2026.
Q: Can I get a stimulus payment without a Social Security Number?
No. A valid Social Security Number issued before the return due date is required to qualify for stimulus or economic relief payments. Applicants without one are ineligible.
Q: Which programs are still sending payments on a rolling schedule in 2026?
Some state-level stimulus programs and targeted relief funds are sending payments on rolling schedules tied to birth dates or filing dates this spring. Refundable tax credits like the EITC and CTC are also actively distributing funds.
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Vivienne Marlowe Reyes

Senior Tax & Stimulus Writer covering stimulus payments, tax credits, and IRS policy. M.S. Tax Policy Georgetown. Former U.S. Treasury analyst. Enrolled Agent.

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