More than eight million New Yorkers, from those crammed onto the subway in Manhattan to those on a tight budget in Buffalo, could see up to $400 per household land in their mailboxes under an approved “inflation” tax refund plan that is now underway.
But don’t get your hopes up too high: this isn’t a state lottery, but a cold calculation based on your 2023 taxes, and if you didn’t play that tax game in time, you could be left watching the mail carrier jump over your doorstep.
Shipments began in late September, with six million already in transit by early November, but paperwork and human—or algorithmic—errors have turned this into an obstacle course for many.
Who is eligible for NYS “inflation” tax refunds
The crux of the matter, as always in these tax messes, lies in who crosses the finish line. To grab their share, they must have filed their 2023 state resident tax return (that Form IT-201 they hate filling out).
Also, must have lived here year-round like a true New Yorker, and have their adjusted gross income (that line 33 that the Internal Revenue Service scrutinizes so closely) not exceed the magic thresholds: $75,000 if they are single, head of household, or married separately; or double that, $150,000, if they share a bed and income with their significant other.
Do Social Security beneficiaries qualify?
Many of you missed out because your monthly paychecks aren’t considered taxable in the state, but here’s the golden tip: if you didn’t file anything that year, hurry and amend it retroactively—you have three years to do so—and claim what’s rightfully yours. The state has set up aid programs for widows, tax orphans, and other lost souls in the limbo of forgotten tax returns.
And now, if your pocket doesn’t bleed more than $75,000 (or $150,000 as a couple), expect $200 if you go alone or are the head of a household, or $400 if you are a couple applying for the stimulus payment together.
If they cross the invisible threshold—between $75,000 and $150,000, or double that for married couples—the payment drops to $150 or $300, respectively. It’s clean money, straight from the public coffers, born from a 2025-2026 state budget that acknowledged sales taxes had eaten the middle class’s lunch.
What do I do if my check is delayed?
If your check got lost in the ocean of the postal service, like so many packages in this Amazon era, the waves of shipments continue until the end of November 2025, so give it a week or two from the postmark date.
If panic sets in, enter your Social Security number and zip code into the Internal Revenue Service’s online tool – search for “NY inflation refund status” – and follow the trail.
Now, if the problem is that you changed your address since your last tax return, update it in your tax account before things get complicated. And if the check really did disappear, wait six months before requesting a duplicate.






