depends on who the check was written to....most of the time yes
You can go to your local bank or the bank which you bank with and ask a mortgage loan officer, or a loan officer to run your credit to see what it is.
No. A Stop Payment can be issued on a check only before it is being submitted for clearance. If the person to whom you have issued the check has not yet deposited it into his account or if you have lost the check itself, you can issue a stop payment on it. But, if the check has already been deposited and returned by the bank because of lack of funds, you cannot issue stop payment.
bad check cannot be put on bankruptcy. your bank is the one you have to deal with directly about a bad check. the problem you run into with bad checks is two fold. first, if the bank has paid the check and your account is nsf, then you won't be able to declare bankruptcy and simple walk away. you will have to pay the negative balance and bring this to "zero" balance or you will not be able to open another checking account with any other bank. they have their own bank account history reporting system that is unrelated to the major credit bureaus. second, if the bank did not pay the check, the vendor is allowable under law to submit the check twice, send you notification of nsf, and then send the matter to the local authorities and they can begin a legal process by which they will place a warrant for your arrest and you will have to appear in court to defend yourself against "theft by check" charges. Make sure the bank paid the check first, very important, then pay the bank back so you can open another checking account.
You need valid ID. When you deposit an uncertified check and you don't have enough money in your account to cover it, the bank may hold the funds until the check clears. If you want to borrow money from the bank, the bank will run a credit check on you. This is to determine if you are likely to default (not make the payments) If you deal honestly with banks, they will value your business
depends on who the check was written to....most of the time yes
Only two people can check the balance in a bank account. They are:The Customer - who owns and operates the bank accountBank Officials - who work for the bank and run the bankNo one else is allowed to view the balance in a bank account.
Check tranmission fluid level. Start engine run through all gears twice then check level.
You can go to your local bank or the bank which you bank with and ask a mortgage loan officer, or a loan officer to run your credit to see what it is.
You don't have to, but you can. Distilling it twice simply removes more impurities in the alcohol. So, distill away!
No. A Stop Payment can be issued on a check only before it is being submitted for clearance. If the person to whom you have issued the check has not yet deposited it into his account or if you have lost the check itself, you can issue a stop payment on it. But, if the check has already been deposited and returned by the bank because of lack of funds, you cannot issue stop payment.
A cheap personal check is a regular check that is for sale. For instance, when you run out of checks you have to order through your bank and those rates are expensive. Or you can order cheap checks from an outside source and save 10% to 15% or more. Those are what cheap personal checks are.
Yes, it is perfectly legal to check your credit score before opening an account with a bank. The bank themselves would run a credit check on you before finalizing the account opening procedure. However a good credit score is not mandatory to open a deposit account.
A credit score check will be run for the credit card processing. you can read more about it at ww.creditcardprocessingsource.com/glossary.php
bad check cannot be put on bankruptcy. your bank is the one you have to deal with directly about a bad check. the problem you run into with bad checks is two fold. first, if the bank has paid the check and your account is nsf, then you won't be able to declare bankruptcy and simple walk away. you will have to pay the negative balance and bring this to "zero" balance or you will not be able to open another checking account with any other bank. they have their own bank account history reporting system that is unrelated to the major credit bureaus. second, if the bank did not pay the check, the vendor is allowable under law to submit the check twice, send you notification of nsf, and then send the matter to the local authorities and they can begin a legal process by which they will place a warrant for your arrest and you will have to appear in court to defend yourself against "theft by check" charges. Make sure the bank paid the check first, very important, then pay the bank back so you can open another checking account.
Gringotts Bank is run by goblins.
You need valid ID. When you deposit an uncertified check and you don't have enough money in your account to cover it, the bank may hold the funds until the check clears. If you want to borrow money from the bank, the bank will run a credit check on you. This is to determine if you are likely to default (not make the payments) If you deal honestly with banks, they will value your business