If you recently deposited a personal check into your account, the bank will let you use $100 immediately by law. Until the rest of it clears however, it may show up on your bank statement as a "memo debit" until the check clears. For example, you deposit a check for $800. $100 is made available to you right away, but $700 will appear as a memo debit. Once the check clears 3-11 days later, that amount will disappear from your Pending debits and you will have access to the full amount of the check.
Check your e-mail. It may not be sent to you right away, but you should get one eventually.
Let's say you have $100 in your account. You deposit another $100. Sometimes the bank will "hold" your deposit until the check clears, or until the next business day if you deposited it after the teller was on the "next day" (such as after 3PM, etc.). In that case, your account balance will be $200, and your available balance (the amount you can actually use) will be only $100. Usually cash deposits go right to the "available" because they don't have to "clear." If you are in a rush and need money in your account right away, contact the head teller and tell them: 1. You want to deposit the money with a teller still working on today and 2. You'd like them to approve the funds as immediately available. Depending on your balance, if you ever bounced a check, how well they know you, the amount, etc. they will usually make some or all of it "available" which is the same as saying it goes into that balance. You can only cash a check or use an ATM for the available amount, not the account balance, and if you write a check, it will bounce if it is presented before the "available" amount reaches the amount of the check.
Yes, but not necessarily right away.
My baby father deposits a check into my bank account without me being present and without it being signed over. Once he told me after he did it, I right away and took his money out of my account, now I'm overdraft 2,400 because the check he was able to put in my account was put on hold. I was told it was a bank error for letting it happen because the check was not signed over and I was not present, but then they said its my fault as well for taking it out the cash.
If you recently deposited a personal check into your account, the bank will let you use $100 immediately by law. Until the rest of it clears however, it may show up on your bank statement as a "memo debit" until the check clears. For example, you deposit a check for $800. $100 is made available to you right away, but $700 will appear as a memo debit. Once the check clears 3-11 days later, that amount will disappear from your Pending debits and you will have access to the full amount of the check.
If a cashier gives you back the wrong change you can go back to the cashier and explain to them how they gave you too much or too little. That is the right thing to do, however many people may just walk away if it is in their favor.
you look away from the cashier
They will arrest at the first opportunity.
Check your owner's manual. Unless the manual requires some type of prep before use, there should not be a reason to not use it right away.
No. But check the others carefully and remove the moldy ones right away.
Check and/or change transmission fluid and filter
You can cash a check at a different bank if the check was drawn on that bank. Some banks will cash a check drawn on a different bank but funds will not be available right away. They will wait for the check to clear.
There is no established period. You go right away and check yourself. No fear.
You can, but check with your doctor before getting pregnant
Check the DMV manual.
Check your e-mail. It may not be sent to you right away, but you should get one eventually.