I Wonder Why This Number Is Rising So...
Politics1 min ago
Take care dealing with a certain Building Society who Howard advertises - it has an "X" in the name.
I banked a cheque yesterday and expected to get some shopping this weekend but find that the crediting to your account takes 8 days - 7 clear banking days for cheques to be credited to your account. Any cheques you write are cleared within 3 days so "X" sits on your cheque deposits for an additional 5 days
Within the next fortnight I am banking a very large cheque from the proceeds of my house sale and need to immediately issue two cheques (deposit and removal fees) and of course my money will not be credited in time or my cheques will bounce. I have just visited them to ask about this and they were offhand and only reiterated "8 days"
Right now I am very unhappy how this building society can get away with over a week to clear a cheque and I am going to get very hungry until 24th when I can spend some money on food for myself and dogs.
Take caution in dealing with this Building Society - their charge now is �39 per letter and I understand �25 for any overdraft fee, so that's �64 in charges.
No best answer has yet been selected by flubber. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Halifax (HBOS) is a bank. However, they are not a clearing bank and they have to rely on other financial institutions to clear their cheques. (Abbey National uses HSBC for example).
This would explain why they take "that little bit extra" (forgive the pun) to clear your cheque.
Halifax boast a better rate of interest than the other big four. However, if you do wish to pay a cheque into your account, or pay a bill over their counter by cheque you come a cropper. Call me a cynic, but their is no such thing as a free lunch!
I would suggest moving to a clearing bank (as stevie 21 quite rightly suggests). HSBC, RBS group (including NatWest), Lloyds and Barclays to name a few. Interestingly enough, Halifax merged with the Bank of Scotland (hence HBOS). I always thought that they (Bank of Scotland) were a clearing bank. Perhaps they could use their system? After all, they are the same outfit! A suggestion for the chief exec of Halifax as and when he removes his finger from his behind perhaps?
Now we are talking names I will dtich Halifax asap. What really has rubbed salt into the wound is that on 31st I shall bank �100K and need to immediately write a cheque for rent deposit and pay a removal man. Halifax know the money is coming in from the solicitor but they will still not allow me to touch it for 8 days - so the two cheques will bounce. It also means that I cannot move directly into a rented home so for 3-4 days the furniture will have to be stored and I sleep in the car probably.
Now I did a quick sortie to Nat West and spoke about this situation and was told that providing the �100K is banked I can write a cheque immediately for rent and removals. That, to my mind is good business practise.
As an old customer I would have thought that Halifax could have helped me but no - so as Nat West won't take 8 days to release my funds they can have all my money and Halifax can go away.
Oh yes, 8 days is far too long. I really wish I could bring this to someone's attention for investigation because there's nothing - nothing - written anywhere to state 8 days clearance on banked cheques.
I'll open an account with Nat West tomorrow. I am assured that a cheque book and card will be ordered tomorrow and kept at the Bank until I deposit my funds and the chequebook will be available for me at that time. Also that I can write the two immediate cheques that I will need to do.
That is banking efficiency and a good business policy.but as to Halifax......I am still seething and in for a hungry few days until 24th
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