It's possible your $1,400 stimulus check could show up in your mailbox in the form of a prepaid debit card, or EIP card. And yes, it's legitimate. Managing Editor Alison DeNisco Rayome joined CNET in ...
Yes, the IRS is sending some stimulus payments as debit cards. As of March 24, the IRS is no longer sending payments through direct deposit. All subsequent payments will be delivered as either a ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I share strategies for getting ahead financially and building wealth. For the $1,200 stimulus check associated with the CARES Act, ...
While some people have started to receive their stimulus payments from the $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill as direct deposit payments, others will have to wait on the postal service. Some ...
As the Detroit Free Press recently reported, new debit card scams are popping up and gaining momentum (2). One of the most ...
The IRS and Treasury are sending out around four million prepaid debit cards containing people's Economic Impact Payment (EIP)—otherwise known as the stimulus check—to those that have not yet received ...
Don’t toss out that mail just yet! The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is reminding taxpayers that some Economic Impact Payments, sometimes called stimulus checks, are being sent by prepaid debit card.
Millions of Americans have received their $600 stimulus check by direct deposit since the beginning of the new year. Yet many are still waiting on the Economic Impact Payment for coronavirus relief.