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I pay bills with checks because I'm not paying a processing fee
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Some basics about money people need to understand. Debt based money. And that every credit card transaction contributes to the concept and we in America are addicted to it. Every dollars spent on a credit card is money created by banks out of thin air.
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My neighbor uses cash only, and will go through the great length and time consuming practice of paying with exact change. 74 year old man counting pennies at the register.
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Well there are a few reasons that I do but I only find myself writing maybe a total of six checks a year.
First, I have a life insurance policy and they always send me a bill with a return envelope for my check twice a year. I have not looked carefully to see if there is a credit card option but they have no problems with the check. Second, I am a member of a small club and paying them the dues by check is easier for them as they have no epayments facility and it is easy enough to walk the checks to the local bank (plus no fees - see below). Finally there is my church. While they do accept epayments, the church is assessed a fee of something like 1.5%-2% by the payment processor (as are all forms of epayments) and the church asks us to add additional money on top of our payment to cover that cost (ex. If I am paying $1000 towards my pledge, the fee could be $15 extra). In that case I say F__K IT and I pay them by check dropped in the plate. They get the full amount I am paying and I am not paying some payment processor $15 or so for the privilege of making an payment that I can easily do by check. If the church stopped taking checks for some reason, then I would pay by cash and let them figure it out. I am NOT paying the crazy convenience fees. As far as I know, paying by check is still "free" except for the possible postage which is still cheaper than any "convenience fee" that is assessed on electronic payments. |
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Yeah it sucks getting behind some relic with a checkbook. Then they stand there and balance the damn thing after they are checked out.
Listening to a grown man whine like a bitch about it would be worse. |
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My job is centered around banking compliance and fraud. Card fraud makes up the majority, but there are more balances in place to track, protect, and cover users for cards.
Checks are just like "HEY, HERE ARE MY ACCOUNT AND ROUTING NUMBERS, WILL YOU PLEASE FUCK ME". Add to that the process for check fraud is much, much harder to overturn and track, so victims usually get a lengthy financial fucking instead of a few days of insured investigation. I requested my bank stop sending me checks and destroyed all of mine, as do all of the people in my field. When you use checks you're basically handing out individual copies of your card. |
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Quoted: I pay some mail in bills with checks. I do not carry a checkbook. I hate people who write a check for groceries or other goods when there is a line of people behind them. View Quote I've never written a check in my life in person at a store. My wife pays bills with our checks, and occasionally I'll purchase something via the Net / phone and pay with a check. Cash in person, or CC online. I have been behind MANY a person paying with a check at a grocery store. "What's today's date?" is your first clue it's a nitwit. |
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Church offerings and how my kids piano teacher likes to be paid
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I only have a couple things I write checks for and everything else is paid online. No way in hell im writing a check at the grocery store and haven’t seen anything pay at the store in a long time. About half of my customers pay for their service/installs with checks though.
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To piss off millenials and gen z whiners. They were good enough to keep you fed and clothed when you were little shits completely dependent on mom and dad.
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The couple that boards our horse only take cash or check and we dont carry cash. Same for my landscaper.
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I hate checks.
But. Credit cards often have a $2k daily limit. Debit cards a $500-$1k daily limit. Wire transfers are a PITA and have a fee. I occasionally get a cashiers check if I have to buy something big. Because of the bullshit drug war laws, moving money is a bear. And $10k ain't what it used to be. |
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Personally I rarely use them. Business I use them all the time
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Quoted: I hate checks. But. Credit cards often have a $2k daily limit. Debit cards a $500-$1k daily limit. Wire transfers are a PITA and have a fee. I occasionally get a cashiers check if I have to buy something big. Because of the bullshit drug war laws, moving money is a bear. And $10k ain't what it used to be. View Quote I think the single biggest charge I've ever put on a CC was like $3500 though. |
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Because we simply don't trust the internet, and many times it's just the easiest way, excuse me for living!
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For personal use checks are pretty much dead and I an glad about that.
Business use is completely different. |
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a person buys an item without a tag (different size shirt) , all they have to do is grab the same item next to it with the tag so the cashier can scan that one rather then a long wait for a price check
these are the people you can loathe |
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Quoted: Old people. They can't get with the times. View Quote Fuck that. Most of what I see using checks are welfare pigs. I don't know why, most of them can't even use calculators. Retirees often use them because it's what they know, although since all boomers are rich they use should their Visa Gold and Platinum cards and let their accountants take care of it all. BTW, most stores scan the check and process it electronically from a blank check which is immediately returned to the customer, all filled out for their records. I write one check a month. The people I rent from can't keep track of cash payments, and aren't set up to accept credit/debit cards from their rentals. |
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See a guy at work at least once a month with all his bills in envelops with a check for each one head out to go pay them. He still reads the newspaper though. Sometimes I ask, "so what happened in yesterdays news" or "did you read about", then insert news that just broke.
Think the only thing I have to use a check for is my annual range fee. |
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I watched a woman pay for her prescription last week with a check for $0.86. It made me angry and I wasn’t even in line behind her.
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1 - Because car dealerships charge 3% on CC payment (cock suckers).
2 - Paper trail of payment or non-payment with a bounced check. |
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I'll only use a check when no other options exist.
I tend to write no more than 5-6 per year it seems. |
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I recently spent four hours on the phone trying to resolve a card issue. I've never had to do that with a check.
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What if you card stopped working for whatever reason or the card reader is down?
And you do not have enough cash on you? Though not common this has happened to me and some others over the last few years and had to pay with a check. Not common but it can occur. |
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Quoted: Mine is 5000 or 7500 not sure. If I'm spending that much or more it's most likely going to be a check. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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I use cash or a card depending. I always like having cash on hand because sometimes you can score a deal at a yardsale or estate sale.
I used checks for rent, utilities, and membership at the sportsman's club. Now I have a mortgage and a different utility company, and I can pay both online without a stupid transaction fee. Still need a checkbook for the sportsman's club unless they get with the times. My boomer parents finally got debit cards this year. I showed my dad that transactions show up almost instantly on the credit union website. Live balance instead of people holding onto checks forever is much better. |
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Mainly business transactions, wrote one last month for $117,289.95.
Keeps the accountant happy and all my clients pay by check. |
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Not everyone is a city dweller.
My local hardware store, water company, and refuse company don't accept any type of card payment. ETA: And recently decided to pay electric bill online, until I learned they want $3 to do so. Fuck that. |
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Quoted: Do you own a business? If you did, you'd understand. Check for $1000 - you get $1000 CC charge for $1000- you get $960-985 I talked to some business owners that paid $32,000 in credit card fees last year. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: It's 2020, why in this day and age ,do people still use checks at the checkout? I audibly groan every time I see someone pull the checkbook out and take forever to fill it out at the register. Now granted it always seems to be "folks of a certain age" but I can't wait until checks go the way of the cassette tape and pay phone. Using plastic is quick and seems so much safer. Like someone said in another thread, you lose a credit card, it's one phone call to reverse the charges. The ONLY reason I keep checks around is to mail funds, even then, I try to use Paypal first. Do you own a business? If you did, you'd understand. Check for $1000 - you get $1000 CC charge for $1000- you get $960-985 I talked to some business owners that paid $32,000 in credit card fees last year. |
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Quoted: More and more places are charging CC surcharges. If a client pays me $1,000 via CC, I have to cough up $10-$40 in fees, depending on the card they use. View Quote That "free money" that everyone in GD loves has to come from somewhere... the merchant. Then he folds those costs into the price of goods. |
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^^^This
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Quoted: Same. Mail in to avoid the processing fees but also for water here. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Because I refuse to pay a $5 fee per transaction to give the city my money for garbage and sewer every month. They get their money more quickly online but want to charge the customer for it. Nope! Same. Mail in to avoid the processing fees but also for water here. Our water, sewer and Garbage are on one bill. But paying $60 a year more to give them my money more quickly? Yeah...that won't happen. |
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Quoted: What if you card stopped working for whatever reason or the card reader is down? And you do not have enough cash on you? Though not common this has happened to me and some others over the last few years and had to pay with a check. Not common but it can occur. View Quote It's for an account that never has much in it though. (Less than $50 currently) I figure if it's something that important I can just do a transfer (that's instant) on my phone before writing it. If I don't have reception and CC readers aren't working and banks are closed and I don't have the cash it just wasn't meant to be |
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My 83yo father in law cannot grasp that a check, once scanned by the point of sale system, is converted to an electronic debit and the paper check is void. He gets into verbal arguments with cashiers all the time that they need to keep the check to get paid, while they insist it is his per their training.
He also carries his checkbook in the back pocket of his pants and regularly drops it in the stall at the grocery store after taking dump when he meets his retired friends for coffee every morning. The answering machine message 2-3 times a week is simply "Hey, it's ___, ___ left his checkbook again..." from the assistant manager on duty. Kharn |
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Quoted: It's 2020, why in this day and age ,do people still use checks at the checkout? I audibly groan every time I see someone pull the checkbook out and take forever to fill it out at the register. View Quote Being I am able to walk into a supermarket and buy ONLY the crap on the list, and nothing else, I am the designated food picker-upper and have been going to 2 or 3 stores every single week for the past two decades. There might have been one person in that time that whipped out a checkbook. |
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Quoted: Being I am able to walk into a supermarket and buy ONLY the crap on the list, and nothing else, I am the designated food picker-upper and have been going to 2 or 3 stores every single week for the past two decades. There might have been one person in that time that whipped out a checkbook. View Quote |
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Quoted: Because I refuse to pay a $5 fee per transaction to give the city my money for garbage and sewer every month. They get their money more quickly online but want to charge the customer for it. Nope View Quote |
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