To obtain a cashier's check or cash for a transaction, you can visit a bank or credit union where you have an account. Request a cashier's check from the teller by providing the necessary funds and recipient information. If you need cash, you can withdraw the desired amount from your account at the bank's counter or ATM.
no
any time only to take yhe cash...
They will charge you a fee for doing it, so yes you should be able to cash a check with the proper ID.
Banks are supposed to file a Cash Transaction Report (CTR) for CASH transactions in amounts over $10,000. The key is CASH. The purpose is to track potentially unreported income. If the money for the check comes out of funds already on deposit at the bank, a CTR is not "required". That does not mean that a teller can not file a CTR in that case, but it is not required.
I want to have a cashiers check made out without the remitters name on it. Can I?
At the bank that you use
No. Cash is actual bank notes/coins.
no
No, obviously.
any time only to take yhe cash...
RECEIVABLE
Take it to the bank whose address appears on the check (as the issuing bank) and see if a teller will cash it for you.
Paying by cheque is a cash transaction. Assets: debit =increase credit=decrease
To cash a cashiers check if you have no account and the check is from out of state, you need to go to a business that specializes in cashing checks. You don't need an account there, and it shouldn't matter if a cashier's check is from out of state, since that type of check guarantees the funds. You can also go to a local branch of the bank that issued the cashier's check and cash it, if there is one near you.
They will charge you a fee for doing it, so yes you should be able to cash a check with the proper ID.
3 years or 5 years or longer?
Banks are supposed to file a Cash Transaction Report (CTR) for CASH transactions in amounts over $10,000. The key is CASH. The purpose is to track potentially unreported income. If the money for the check comes out of funds already on deposit at the bank, a CTR is not "required". That does not mean that a teller can not file a CTR in that case, but it is not required.