Maintaining
a Balanced Checking Account

A checking
account is a contractual relationship between you and your financial
institution, with each party having specific responsibilities.
The financial institution
holds your money in a safe place and helps to facilitate your purchases.
You are responsible for handling your account wisely by not writing
checks for more money than you have in your account.
Rejected or
Bounced Checks
If you write a check
for more than is in your account, the check will be rejected when
it comes in for payment. It will be sent back to the person who
deposited it and you will be charged for "bouncing" it.
The merchant you wrote it to will not only charge a returned check
fee, but the law enables the merchant to charge you for up to three
times the amount of the check. In addition, you may be subject to
court proceedings and be required to take special classes on money
management. One bad $12 check could cost you $150!
Do not write a check
before you make a deposit, counting on the "float" time.
With the electronic nature of banking, a check can clear the financial
institution the same day you write it.
Overdraft Protection
Many financial institutions
will offer you overdraft protection through your credit
card or savings
account. When you write a check for more than is in your account,
the overdraft protection will kick in and the check will be covered.
There is usually a fee charged for this service.
Online Account
Access
Many financial institutions
now offer account
access via the Internet. This service is usually free of charge,
and is a convenient way to keep track of your transactions.
The ability to transfer
funds, receive and pay
bills, place a stop payment on a check, and downloadable financial
management software are also commonly available online services.
Keeping Track
Keep track of your
deposits (credits), checks you write, ATM withdrawals, and fees
you are charged (debits) in a check register. Record the following
information:
- Check number (this
alerts you if a check is missing in sequence)
- Date you wrote the
check or made the deposit
- Who you wrote the
check to
- What you wrote the
check for
- The amount of the
check
Balancing Your
Statement
Each month your financial
institution will send you a statement detailing the activity in
your account. This includes all the checks you wrote, ATM withdrawals,
deposits, charges, fees and any other activity on your account during
the month. It is important that you carefully review this statement
to make sure it agrees with your records. Mistakes can be very costly!
Steps to Maintaining
a Balanced Account
- Mark off in your
check register every item that appears on your statement. If there
are items on your statement that are not listed in your check
register, first determine if it is accurate. You may have forgotten
to record something in your check register. If the item is correct,
list it in your check register. If you believe the item is incorrect
and you suspect an error was made, call the financial institution
immediately to have it investigated.
- Your financial institution
should provide you with a monthly reconciliation worksheet. Enter
the ending balance shown on your statement. List the deposits
and other credits that are in your check register but are not
on your statement. Add these to your ending balance.
- List the checks,
ATM withdrawals, fees and other debits that are on your check
register but not listed on the statement. Subtract these from
your balance in step 3 to get your new ending balance.
- Write down the balance
in your checkbook.
- List deposits that
are on the statement but are not in the check register. Add these
to your checkbook balance.
- List the checks,
ATM withdrawals, fees and other debits that are on your statement
but are not listed in your check register. Subtract these from
your balance in step 6 to get your new ending checkbook balance.
- These totals should
now be the same. If they aren't, re-check everything again and
again until you see the error. If all else fails re-add your checkbook.
If you still can't find the error, ask for assistance from your
financial institution.
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