News6 mins ago
Opening A Bank Account
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I decided to open a bank account with the bank right next to where I live. However since it is a long time since I opened one - I couldn't believe the parapheranalia that was involved.
The lad was only doing his job but I told him after about one hour and 10 minutes of ID, ID number, type this number on but don't use that number and gave me like a tiny card with lots of 6 digits.
I told him that no reflection on him but for anybody trying to join that bank - going through that would have been mayhem for many older people.
I had to actually type a 4 digit number that I had to make up quickly in my head (on his computer) and something else I had to type. What about people who literally do not have keyboard skills or anything like that. Unbelievable. I did tell him to convey my annoyance at this at his schedules/meetings etc. Sorry I joined to be honest or is this the norm.
The lad was only doing his job but I told him after about one hour and 10 minutes of ID, ID number, type this number on but don't use that number and gave me like a tiny card with lots of 6 digits.
I told him that no reflection on him but for anybody trying to join that bank - going through that would have been mayhem for many older people.
I had to actually type a 4 digit number that I had to make up quickly in my head (on his computer) and something else I had to type. What about people who literally do not have keyboard skills or anything like that. Unbelievable. I did tell him to convey my annoyance at this at his schedules/meetings etc. Sorry I joined to be honest or is this the norm.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My first bank account was in 1968. Computers then were huge machines that needed their own dedicated power supply. I don't think my bank even had one. If you wanted to cash a cheque at another branch of the same bank (Barclays in my case) you had to have an 'arrangement' or pay a fee for them to phone and check with your home bank .I had an 'arrangement' with the bank near my work place,which was 20 miles from home.
I remember the old 'arrangement' system. I had one as cheque cards were then in their infancy. I opened my account in 1970 when I was in the RAF. All I needed was a letter from my flight commander to say I was a fit and proper person to operate a bank account. I got my first cheque card in 1972 when I went to university. I don't remember ATMs being around then, you had to queue up in the bank to cash a cheque.
I do it quite often. If it's the first time I'm paying someone I always send a nominal amount like £2 first and ask them to confirm they have received it just to check I hadn't mistyped the account number/sortcode. SOme banks will doa quick check when you set up a new payee- maybe text you and ask you to enter an authorisation code
Yes, a first bank account will need proof of ID and probably passport, but once you've been in the system teh banks normally have access to enough info- maybe credit score files- that they don't need to keep seeing it, unless you move house then they may want proof of the new address, or change name when proof may also be needed.