It is always best to put a stop payment on a check if you do not want the check to be cashed. All banks can put a stop payment on a check easily for a fee.
Two to three working days. However, the bank may hold the funds up to a week on a deposit. If you write a check, it may be cashed out that same day.
6. Days
This depends on the type of check being deposited. Typically a check can be held for a maximum of 11 business days of it is non-local and does not qualify for next day availability under government regulation. A bank could hold your check longer, though, if they feel it is reasonable to do so. For local checks the hold period is typically 7 business days, but again the bank may extend if they feel it is reasonable.
ABSOLUTLEY, they not only can hold the check, the bank can keep the money.
No. The money on hold is not available to you for any reason until the hold is released.
Two to three working days. However, the bank may hold the funds up to a week on a deposit. If you write a check, it may be cashed out that same day.
4 days after you check out
zero days
Property Management company can only 5 days hold a rent check.
6. Days
Yes, the payee received the funds from the bad check and is responsible for returning those funds to the check cashing facility. The payee can then seek restitution from the maker for the funds from the check plus any fees, etc. they paid.
Check back every minute
It depends on the bank and branch that issued the cheque you are depositing. If the cheque is issued by RBS and that too the same branch where you hold an account, the cheque can be cashed within one day. If the cheque is issued by a different bank and in a different city, it may take as much as 2-3 business days.
yes they can....
Yes, just show your id. They may have to hold the check for 3-5 days (business days) to check and make sure it's legit.
if there is eg: a 5 day hold then the bank will hold it for the full 5 days, some banks will hold for anywhere from 3 to 5 business days no matter how much money is in the account already, especially if the cheque has been deposited by machine.
First off, it's not YOUR car at all ... it is owned by the lending agency as they hold the actual title. You are just the registered owner. You are financially responsible to repair the car to the owners satisfaction, or pay off the loan in full. The insurance company should have given the check to the collision repair facility - that is normally how things are done. Since you have cashed the check, and obviously have used the funds for other than what they were intended, you now have to finance the repairs to the car, regardless of the repossession.