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There is an increasing number of shops that cash cheques (for a fee).
1 Who uses these shops, and why? I thought everyone was now entitled to a basic bank account.
2 How much commission do these shops take from each cheque?
3 How do the shops then cash the cheques, given that the cheques presumably were not made out to the shops in the first place?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I don't know how they get around presenting crossed cheques that are not payable to them.
I can see why someone might use such a place. Even with a basic bank account, it is possible (although unlikey) to become overdrawn. In that case, if you paid a cheque into your account, they would deduct the amount of the overdraft before they allowed to to withdraw funds.
Depending on the size of the overdraft, even after the fee has been deducted you may still end up with more cash by using a cheque cashing place that you would by paying it into your account.
These places also cash personal cheques and defer presentation for upto 28 days. Therefore you could cash a cheque about 4 weeks before you were due to get paid.
I was stupid enough to use these places when I got into financial difficulty a few years ago. I was cashing cheques to get the cash and then cashing another cheque about 20 days later, so that I could pay the cash into my bank account to cover the first cheque that was due to be debited. Needless to say I got into a complete mess with what I had cashed and what cheques were due out when and it all ended when the bank took my cheque guarantee card off me - basically meaning I couldn't cash anymore cheques. If I'm honest, I'm glad they did! (I have it back now, I'm a responsible adult, honest!)
When I was writing cheques for �50, I was getting about �46 in return so it is quite a hefty fee.