Every bank cheque has a validity of 6 months from the date of issue of cheque. Let us say you issue a cheque to somebody on Jan 1st, till June 30th the cheque is valid. From July 1st the cheque is expired.
When either of the below happens: * Not enough funds in the account to pay the cheque * Signature of the cheque issuer does not match with the signature in the cheque * Cheque is expired (Date of cheque is before 6 months from date of deposit) * There are any over-writings in the cheque without being counter signed by the cheque issuer.
Some reasons are: * Insufficient funds in the cheque drawee account * Corrections/over writing in the cheque which is not counter signed by the cheque issuer * Signature of A/c holder not matching * Cheque expired (Beyond 6 months of date of issue)
An unpresented cheque is one that hasnt been presented for payment yet. A stale cheque is one that has expired.
A stale cheque is a term used to refer to a cheque that is old and expired. Such cheques are totally worthless. Cheques usually have a validity period after which they are considered expired or stale. In india the validity is 3 months and in most countries around the globe it is between 3 to 6 months. If I give you a cheque on 1st of May 2013 the cheque will be valid till 31st July 2013 and starting 1st August 2013, the cheque will be considered stale. If you try to cash that cheque, you will not get any money.
Every bank cheque has a validity of 6 months from the date of issue of cheque. Let us say you issue a cheque to somebody on Jan 1st, till June 30th the cheque is valid. From July 1st the cheque is expired.
When either of the below happens: * Not enough funds in the account to pay the cheque * Signature of the cheque issuer does not match with the signature in the cheque * Cheque is expired (Date of cheque is before 6 months from date of deposit) * There are any over-writings in the cheque without being counter signed by the cheque issuer.
Some reasons are: * Insufficient funds in the cheque drawee account * Corrections/over writing in the cheque which is not counter signed by the cheque issuer * Signature of A/c holder not matching * Cheque expired (Beyond 6 months of date of issue)
An unpresented cheque is one that hasnt been presented for payment yet. A stale cheque is one that has expired.
A stale cheque is a term used to refer to a cheque that is old and expired. Such cheques are totally worthless. Cheques usually have a validity period after which they are considered expired or stale. In india the validity is 3 months and in most countries around the globe it is between 3 to 6 months. If I give you a cheque on 1st of May 2013 the cheque will be valid till 31st July 2013 and starting 1st August 2013, the cheque will be considered stale. If you try to cash that cheque, you will not get any money.
A cheque may bounce if: a. The person trying to cash the cheque doe not have an account with the bank b. If the name on the cheque does not match the person trying to cash it c. If the cheque is expired (More than 90 days in the past) d. If the signature on the cheque does not match the signature of the person who issued the cheque e. If there is not enough funds in the bank account to pay for the cheque
A Cheque that is returned by the cheque issuing branch because it is not a fully valid instrument to dispense cash. It could be because the cheque has expired or the account holder signature is not consistent or illegible or there is over writing in the payee name or the amount etc or if the account does not have sufficient balance to pay the cheque.
A bank may refuse to accept an account payee cheque if: a. The person trying to cash the cheque doe not have an account with the bank b. If the name on the cheque does not match the person trying to cash it c. If the cheque is expired (More than 90 days in the past) d. If the signature on the cheque does not match the signature of the person who issued the cheque
A bank may refuse to accept an account payee cheque if: a. The person trying to cash the cheque doe not have an account with the bank b. If the name on the cheque does not match the person trying to cash it c. If the cheque is expired (More than 90 days in the past) d. If the signature on the cheque does not match the signature of the person who issued the cheque
When the signature on the cheque doesn't match the customers signatureWhen there are not enough funds in the accountWhen there is any overwriting or editing in the cheque without a counter signatureWhen the cheque is expired (More than 90 days from the date of issue)
A bank may reject a cheque due to a variety of reasons. They are: a. The signature of the cheque issuer does not match bank records b. There is not enough money in the issuers bank account to pay for the cheque c. There is overwriting in the cheque and is not duly counter-signed d. The amount in numbers and amount in words does not match e. The cheque is very old and expired (more than 90 days old)
this is a cheque that has expired or matured long before it is presented in the bank for payment. The expirery is six months after maturation.