When to expect your stimulus check, and other questions, answered

Joe Biden has signed a third stimulus package into law. Now, $1,400 direct payments will soon be on their way.

Updated Mar 11, 2021, 7:37 PM UTC

A blue and green check features a black and <a href=white rendering of the Statue of Liberty, the seal of the US Treasury, and a field for the recipient’s name." width="" height="" />

A blue and green check features a black and <a href=white rendering of the Statue of Liberty, the seal of the US Treasury, and a field for the recipient’s name." width="" height="" />

A stimulus check from the December 2020 round of economic impact payments. STRF/STAR MAX/IPx/AP Images

On Thursday, President Joe Biden signed the American Rescue Plan — a $1.9 trillion stimulus package — into law.

That means a third round of direct cash payments will soon be on the way, but there are a few differences from the stimulus bill Congress passed in December.

Specifically, this round of payments will be quite a bit larger for most of those who received checks previously. Instead of the $600 that was sent out in December, individuals will receive as much as $1,400, depending on their income. However, the income threshold to receive a check will also be stricter this time around, after moderate Senate Democrats used their leverage to negotiate a lower maximum eligible income with the Biden White House.

Those changes mean that about 17 million fewer people will receive a third round of stimulus payments than would have under the House-passed version of the bill, according to the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy, but some 280 million people will still be eligible.

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Here’s what you need to know:

Who qualifies for a $1,400 direct payment?

Unlike previous rounds of payments, eligibility for the new $1,400 checks may be determined based on either 2019 or 2020 tax returns, depending on whether you’ve filed yet for 2020 — and whether the IRS has processed your return. In general, the federal government will use the most recent income information it has on file to determine eligibility.

Here’s who’s eligible for a payment:

When will I receive a direct payment?

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Thursday after the signing that some checks will start being deposited in bank accounts as soon as this weekend. Others may take longer, depending on a few factors.

Is there anything I need to do to get a check?

As Vox’s Fabiola Cineas and Ella Nilsen explained after Congress passed its previous round of direct payments, most people don’t need to do anything to get a stimulus check. If you filed taxes in 2019 or 2020, meet the eligibility requirements, and included your direct deposit information, the payment should show up in your account in the coming weeks.

If your direct deposit information isn’t on file with the IRS yet, you can still provide those details using IRS’s “Get My Payment” tool before the latest wave of payments starts going out.

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