No. As you have already said that it is a fake money order, a bank will never pay for it. Even if you manage to sneak it into the banks deposit system, before paying the money due to the money order, the bank will validate the authenticity of the money order and during that process the fact that it is fake will be found out. And the bank might even decide to pursue legal action against you for using a fake money order.
You can cash them at any post office or your bank. Or you can take them to a check cashing place and they will cash it, but they will charge you 5% to do it.
There are repercussions to a check cashing place if charges are made for a bounced check as long as the person making the bounced check knows that there aren't funds available for immediate use. If you are writing a check, you're liable for charges if the money isn't in the account at the time of the check cashing.
Go to a bank or check cashing place. You wil be charged a fee with the check cashing.
It all depends on the companies policy, however there is not a clear limit for cashing a check. For example Check Cashing USA will cash any check of any amount, of course after proper verification.
At whatever bank that your checking account is in(free). Or at a check cashing place like a liquor store(costs money).
Deposit in your account or a check cashing place will do it for a fee
Try MONEY TREE or any other payday loan / check cashing place. You will need ID and will pay a small fee. Or goto the bank of origin.
none in your area,but Walmart offers 24 hour check cashing
Yes, a check is a bank draft drawn on an account. Provided the account has funds and is payable to you, it can be cashed at your bank or any check cashing place or if you go to the bank it was drawn on with ID, they will cash it for you.
Yes.Please understand it is irrelevant whether the check was verified by the check cashing place or not. Although it may be a risk management best practice, check cashing services (including banks) are simply not able to immediately verify funds every check that they cash. The determination of whether to cash the check is a complex matrix that the cashier or teller as well as the system they are using are well trained to apply.If you write a check, you are making a contract saying, "I have X dollars in my account numbered 1234567890 at Drawee Bank and I want Drawee Bank to withdraw that money and give it to Payee." You must have already verified that X dollars are available to be given to Payee. If they are not, youmust find some other way to give Payee the money you have legally agreed to give him.The check cashing place is owed money from the Payee because it is really the Payee's problem to track you down and receive reparations from your bad check. It cannot be the check cashing place's problem. They should seek the funds that they gave to the Payee expecting (as they should) that your check would be honored, before they discovered that it was not. You will need to make the appropriate arrangements to repair any damages this has caused to Payee, including the original amount you agreed to pay him.
There is a Connecticut State Check Cashing Service at 164 Boston Avenue in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Their phone number is (203) 382-9670.
Technically, no. The Purchaser's signature is like the signature on the front of a personal or commercial check. Some money orders do not have a place for the Purchaser's signature, but at least a place for the purchaser's name and/or address. If the money order were cashed or deposited by an individual, the originating bank may reject the money order stating that there was no official authorization for issue. In other words, they could argue that some shady employee could have cut the money order on the sly for their own personal gain. Therefore, the funds would be bounced and the depositor or person cashing the money order would incur a fee.