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ChexSystems: The banks’ secret watchdog is watching you

Posted Jun 26 2009, 07:00 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from partner blog The Dough Roller.

Have you ever been turned down for a checking account? While denials are more common when applying for credit, you can also be declined when applying for a bank account.

If you have been declined, it's likely due to a reporting agency that many have never heard of, but has a lot of information about and influence over banking customers. It's called ChexSystems.

Most have heard of the three major credit reporting agencies -- Experian, TransUnion and Equifax. But there is a lesser-known but equally important reporting agency for checking accounts called ChexSystems. Run by Chex Systems Inc., ChexSystems provides account-verification services to its financial institution members to aid them in identifying account applicants who may have a history of account mishandling (for example, people whose accounts were overdrawn and then closed by them or their bank).

We'll take a look at ChexSystems and how it works. Then we'll look at how you can get your ChexSystems report.

What is ChexSystems?

Like the major credit reporting agencies, Chex Systems Inc. is a consumer-reporting agency governed by the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act. Much like a creditor can report late payments or charge-offs to a credit reporting agency, a financial institution may report nonsufficient fund checks or overdrafts to ChexSystems.

Information reported by banks to ChexSystems typically stays in the system for five years. Items are removed before the expiration of the five-year period only if the reporting financial institution requests it or applicable law requires that it be removed. Items remain in the system for five years even if the banking customer subsequently covers the overdraft. The institution, however, should notify ChexSystems that the item has been paid.

What's reported?

As noted above, one of the most common items reported by banks to ChexSystems is a customer's overdraft or NSF transaction. In addition, ChexSystems contains identifying information about banking consumers, including Social Security and driver's license numbers. If identity theft has been reported or a security freeze has been placed on an account, the ChexSystems database also will note that information.

ChexSystems also notes inquiries initiated by a consumer (e.g., applying for a bank account) and those initiated by others, such as creditors and potential employers. Finally, ChexSystems can include information reported by retailers through the Shared Check Authorization Network. SCAN is a comprehensive database of bad-check writers in the U.S. Participating retailers can obtain a customer's history of bad checks, if any, and then decide whether to accept a check. That information is also reported to ChexSystems.

How to avoid ChexSystems

Because ChexSystems can prevent a consumer from qualifying for a checking account, it's important to avoid the common mistakes that can trigger a ChexSystems report. Of course, intentional overdrafts or bad-check writing will certainly result in a ChexSystems report from a financial institution. But there are also some common mistakes that people make that can risk a negative report.

Here are some of the common mistakes to avoid, according to ChexSystems, along with recommended solutions:

  • You forget to stop automatic payments from being taken out before closing an account. Make certain to identify all automatic payments and discontinue them before closing your account. If you do not, you could face steep fees, even after the account is closed. When you request payments to stop, be sure to ask the company how long it will take to process the request. Often companies can take up to two weeks to make your requested payment change. In the meantime, additional payments could be deducted from your account.
  • You close your checking account by letting it go to a zero balance. Always contact your financial institution if you wish to close your account. If you do not formally close your account, fees may be charged even after the funds in the account are depleted. Then you will have a negative balance in your account and possibly overdraft fees, which you will be responsible for paying.
  • A check you deposit in your account does not clear or bounces, causing the account to go into overdraft. Just because you have deposited the check does not guarantee the check has the funds to support it. When you deposit a check, allow enough time to make certain it clears -- usually three to five days -- before writing checks against the balance.
  • You write a check for more than you have in your account. It is very important that you balance your checkbook regularly so that you always know your account balance. If you discover that you have written a check for more than you have in your account, immediately deposit funds to cover the amount of the check and any associated overdraft fees.
  • You co-sign on an account that is abused by the other party. Be very cautious when agreeing to have a joint account or becoming a co-signer on someone else's account. Regardless of which signer mishandles the account, both signers may be held responsible.
  • You give your personal identification number to someone else and that person takes funds from your account without your authorization. Never give your PIN to someone else. It's like opening the door to your finances. Inform your financial institution of the situation. It may suggest that you change your PIN or that you close the account and open a new one.
  • You post-date a check and it's cashed too early. Post-dating checks is hazardous because the other party is not legally obligated to hold the check. If the check is accidentally cashed early, you are responsible.
  • You're not receiving statements or correspondence from your financial institution. If you have moved or changed names, it can sometimes take time for your mailed account statement to catch up with you. Always notify your financial institution about changes to your personal information. Not knowing the status of your account does not excuse you from being responsible for it.
  • The financial institution makes a mistake. Errors, such as posting to the wrong account number or unauthorized withdrawals, have been known to happen. Review your financial institution statements and receipts closely for inaccuracies. Bring any questions or errors to your financial institution's attention immediately. The sooner you do it, the easier it is for the financial institution to correct them.
  • Your checks are lost or stolen. If your checks are lost or stolen, report it immediately to your financial institution. Stopping payment on checks before they fall into the wrong hands is much easier than after someone has written checks against your account. 

Finally, if you think you may be in the ChexSystems database, you can request your report. Just as you are entitled to your credit report every 12 months, you are also entitled to your ChexSystems report. You can obtain it for free by clicking here.

Related reading at The Dough Roller:

Online banking: A complete guide to Internet banks

Best high-yield savings account offers

Beware of bank overdraft protection fees

Comments

 

For every action the banking, credit companies, the government does... There is always a reason. They want to control you or exclude you.

Best response is to use cash only, hide your money, don't attract attention to yourself, and then there is the option of emigrating abroad forever. Just give them bloody bastards the middle finger and opt out of this country's jusidiction.

Don't let corporate, banks and government manipulate you, control you, program your thoughts. One hand washes the other. For every action there is an equal and opposite re-action! Just do the opposite of what it is [Them] wants of you. Join [US] in expatriating abroad.

No one is more suspicious of the financial industry than me.  But to imply that this service somehow constitutes spying on consumers is ridiculous.  People bounce checks every day without any thought as to what they are doing.  It's a federal offense.  You can go to prison for writing a check that is not covered by funds on deposit.  There are excellent reasons for ensuring that people don't do this.  So the next time your bank charges you $25 for bouncing a check, be thankful they're not pressing charges against you.  Having said all that, I never-the-less feel compelled to point out that customer service at most financial institutions continues to be LOUSY.

s c r e w the banks, as business owners we are expected to be cash solvent though this crisis, how on earth could we have been prepared for this???,  when most if not all of the major financial institutions WERE NOT PREPARED.  The banks get free money with out questions and we get our credit lines cut down or off all together.

Send these guys to JAIL.

Please, people think!  I am a banker, this has been around forever!  If we didn't have this system, crooks would line up at new accounts and open an account at every bank they pass just to get the starter checks and debit cards.  To answer one person on this blog... no they are not applying for credit but they would go straight to businesses and write cold checks by the truck loads or what we consider kiting, writing checks to deposit in thier other accounts.  Sooner or later it would be huge losses for businesses and some banks when the house of cards fall. I am sure they are some people that have been wrongly turned down because of some miststake but, that would be rare. If you haven't abused an account somewhere you will have no problem opening an account.

Em, it is possible and it DID occur.  i didn't owe them money...at least until they started charging overdraft for money that I had in the account.  they also had a deal worked out with the utility companies where they cal the bank and say that the amount on the check wasn't and it needed to be "X".  they also engaged in what is known in the banking as double holds on deposits (this where they hold your deposit for whatever reason then hold that same amount again...as an insurance).  trust me that these things did occur and I reported them to my US senator who happens to be on the Banking Finance Comm.  The bank was investigated and it is now owned by some south american entity.

I now use a credit union and cash.

Profit sharing is the notion behind credit unions.  Traditional banks are simply better marketers = better at conning people out of their money.  That is the difference.

It's no different than artificial sweeteners or toys made in China.  It has become fashionable since Reaganomics to not ask the question 'why'.  Just consume without question.  If you are old enough to remember, in the 70's and before, there wasn't the pretend wealth that was spawned in the late 80's, 90's and early 2000’s.  There was not the widely spread pretense of wealth.  You either had wealth or you did not.  Pretenders were few a patently obvious.

Reaganomics allowed the “many” to act and feel as though they were wealthy albeit a poor reproduction.  Most of the truly wealthy I know are more frugal with their money than a small town Baptist Church.  The post 80’s pretenders spent excessively to create the appearance of wealth.  This group wanted to feel wealthy and for the first time in a long while, the average American was able to ‘feel’ wealthy…well until now.

The mistake the poor and middle class have made is not the attempt to be honest with their financial dealings, though in general have managed their fiduciary responsibilities poorly.  The error lies in the failure to ask everyone holding out their hand attempting subversively to take more of their contrived wealth the question ‘why’.

Why do you need to charge me these fees?  Why are these additional chemicals necessary in my food?  Why do we really need to send our production and jobs overseas?  Why do we allow patent criminal activity to exist in our political representative’s behavior? … Why?

When American’s stopped asking ‘why’ and started pretending to be wealth, we ushered in the era of the charlatan banks like those listed above in addition to so many others.  We can also do away with them.   It really is that easy.

If Americans really hated B of A and wanted to hurt them, then all they would need to do is take their money elsewhere.  That is it.  B of A would be brought to their knees if we simply took our collective money and moved it to a local savings and loan or credit union.

Again…Boo B of A!

To Mr. Banker

You are a money changer.  You do not make anything, create anything or add anything to society.  You only try to take a piece of everything.  

Lie to the village idiot, lie to your mother or even lie to yourself if it is what gets you out of bed in the morning.  Please, I beg you, stop the lies you pawn to the rest of us.  A credit union is all that is needed in society.  

A loan is a loan and you know it.  Big banks and Wall Street are absolutely not necessary.  Any rationalization you pontificate only perpetuates the lie.  

You are not need, like leg warmers or silly putty.

You people just don't get it. A bank is a business. Businesses are expected to make money. Banks are not a public service, utility, charity or socialist experiment. They use business practices that are designed to protect both the interests of the customers and of the bank itself. A customer who abuses a checking account has in effect granted himself an unsecured loan without the bank's approval. All you deadbeats who think the bank owes you something can just take your loser accounts to the credit unions and see just how long they put up with you. It won't take them long to go from not-for-profit to not-about-to-let-you-screw-them. They have shareholders to protect and can't afford to give away their services either. The bottom line is: if you can't afford to pay for the benefits, go back to using cash only. You can't overdraw an empty wallet.

I got that same 'no special characters allowed in the address field' comment. It was because I abbreviated Road to Rd. The period is what will cause that. Otherwise it went through fine

DEFAULT ON ALL DEBT OWED TO THE CRIMINALS AT BOA, CITI, MORGAN, UBS, ETC--THE WALL STREET BANKING CLAN.

I RAN UP A HUGE BILL AND STUCK IT TO THESE LOAN SHARKS AND USED THE B-CODE TO MY BENEFIT--SCREW THEM VERSES THEM SCREWING YOU.

AMEN BROTHER AND THE BEST RATE OF RETURN I EVER GOT ON MY MONEY WAS PAYING THE GD FILING FEE.

IF THEY ARE OUT TO SCREW YOU, GET THEM FIRST AND THROW CRIMINAL UNCLE SAMMIE IN THE MIX IF YOU CAN.

THESE PEOPLE ARE THE RULING CLASS AND HURT THESE RICH SOB'S BY NOT GIVING THEM ANOTHER BLOODY PENNY.

BILDERBEG CREW & CENTRAL BANKS CAN B OW ME.

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