It depends on where you write it or where the person you gave it to cashes it. With electronic processing, funds may be debited from your account anywhere from immediately to 48 hours afterwards. If presented in person at the bank it was drawn on for cashing, funds are immediately debited.
5 working days excluding saturday
about fity thousand dollar
Submit it to the Teller in a bank where you have a bank account. If it is a bearer cheque and you have an account in the same bank as that of the cheque, you will be paid cash immediately. If it is an account payee cheque, money will get credited to your account in the next 2-3 days
If the cheque belongs to another bank but belongs to the same city - 2 days (Max) If the cheque belongs to another bank but belongs to a different city but same state - 2 to 3 days (Max) If the cheque belongs to another bank and belongs to a different state - 3 to 5 days (Max) All the durations above are under the assumption that the cheque issuing account has cash to pay for it. The bank may not clear the cheque if the account doesn't have funds for it.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
A "cheque bounce" occurs when a person writes out a cheque, but there are not enough funds in his bank account to clear that cheque. Here's how it works: When you write a cheque, you are instructing your bank to move a certain amount of money from your bank account to someone else. The bank cannot move that kind of money if you do not have sufficient balance in your account. The bank returns the cheque to the person with the word "bounced" beside it. Cheque bouncing can incur any number of penalties, not to mention damaging your credit and even leading to litigation if bounced too often. Ensure you've got sufficient in your account so as not to bounce!
A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque.
"Cheque effects not cleared" typically refers to a situation where a cheque has been deposited into a bank account but the bank has not yet processed or cleared the funds. When a cheque is deposited, it goes through a clearing process, during which the bank confirms that the cheque is valid and that the funds are available in the account of the person or entity issuing the cheque. If the cheque’s effects are "not cleared," it means that the transaction is still pending or waiting to be processed.
When the bank has not enough funds in the relevant account or the account holder requests that the cheque is bounced (under exceptional circumstances) then the bank will return the cheque to the account holder. The beneficiary of the cheque will have not been paid. This normally incurs a fee from the bank.
You can 'express clear' a cheque at any bank - but they will charge you a fee for doing so.
You cannot. A Crossed Cheque is also called an Account Payee Only Cheque which means that, this cheque cannot be cashed directly. It can only be deposited into the bank account of the person to whom this cheque is issued. So, the only way you can cash the cheque is by opening a bank account (or using your existing bank account) and deposit this cheque
When the bank has not enough funds in the relevant account or the account holder requests that the cheque is bounced (under exceptional circumstances) then the bank will return the cheque to the account holder. The beneficiary of the cheque will have not been paid. This normally incurs a fee from the bank.