ChatterBank1 min ago
Paying overdraft
14 Answers
How much can one bank "interfere" with a person's money that they have in another bank? For example, if you had a good sum of money in one bank and wrote out one of their cheques to clear an overdraft with another bank, to whom you still owed balance for loan, credit card, could that bank ask the other bank how much you had in the account and find a way of getting at it, in the same way they can take money from your savings account to pay for a loan payment with them. Sorry because I realise this sounds really garbled, my friend has had her pension lump sum paid into one bank and is convinced that if she writes one of their cheques and pays into her other bank, will somehow think "ah-she has money we'll have that" They have refused to take the amount in cash to clear the overdraft by the way
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.That would be essntially like Tesco charging you for shopping in sainsburys. If the banks are separate (and nowadays, with them all being amalgamated, that is not obvious) then they cannot look at your accounts over both. If they are now joined, they may be able to check what is in both, but I am fairly sure that they would not be able to transfer money between them.
She went to Lloyds, said she wanted to clear her o/d and downgrade her account now that she had retired. They asked how she wanted to clear it, she then said she would bring in cash and then they said that they would refuse to accept that amount in cash because it could potentially be the proceeds of a crime!!! Now she can only write a cheque from the other bank and that's what's bothering her.
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O work in a bank and belive me it would be the end of civilisation if they could access accounts across banks. When a cheque is written the receiver of the cheque has no idea of the balance on the account it is drawn on all they have is a yes or no as to whether it clears, end of. She could also do it with interent banking.
Nationwide isn't a bank anyway to be picky. It's a Building Society and proud of it.
Lloyds will take cash if they can be assured of the source of the money. They won't take cash over a certain value (I think it's 10,000 Euros, whatever that converts to now) unless they have a verifiable source though.
Lloyds will take cash if they can be assured of the source of the money. They won't take cash over a certain value (I think it's 10,000 Euros, whatever that converts to now) unless they have a verifiable source though.
I know Barclays and Barclaycard must have been originally related but I thought they were separate now but in my case B'Card chased me about 5 years down the line for a smallish debt I'd forgotten about (I had cut my card up) by sending me a letter out of the blue saying we now see from your Barclays current account that you are in a financial position to pay off this debt so I obliged. Just making the point that my current account details were accessed.