no
It is best to cash a cheque at your personal bank to avoid fees. If you do not have a personal account with any banks, then go to the bank that the cheque was issued from. Make sure the cheque is not over 6 months old. You will need to bring a current I.D. You will endorse the back of the cheque and give it to the teller.
They both mean the same
Cheque book balance means bank balance as per cheque book
your bank card i think
no
you can cash at Money shop, H & T, and cash generator
Most of the supermarkets in the United States accept personal checks.
a bank cheque (UK) (check)(US)
It is best to cash a cheque at your personal bank to avoid fees. If you do not have a personal account with any banks, then go to the bank that the cheque was issued from. Make sure the cheque is not over 6 months old. You will need to bring a current I.D. You will endorse the back of the cheque and give it to the teller.
There are two ways. # If it is a normal cheque that has not been crossed (not an A/C payee cheque) you can take the cheque to the cheque issuing branch, provide an identity proof and ask for cash # If it is a crossed cheque (A/C payee cheque) you can take it your bank branch and deposit it into your account. Irrespective of whether the cheque is crossed or not, you can use option no. 2. But only if the cheque is plain you can use option no. 1
Yes, so long as the account is still 'open' and has funds to cover the amount of the cheque.
They both mean the same
The homophone you are referring to is "halt" and "halt." "Halt" means to bring something to a stop, while "hault" refers to payment of money.
My cheque has been returned to me and stated" not signed according to mandate" What does this mean?
Cheque book balance means bank balance as per cheque book
It means, issuing a cheque that has a date that is past today's date. Let us say you issue a cheque today, May 28th 2009 and mark the cheque date as June 10th 2009, it means you have issued a post dated cheque.