It's on the website, so yes to new enrollees. No, stock trades are not free. But I have mutual funds, most I have held since 1989, so I have incurred very few trade fees, just the federally allowed IRA fees.That sounds great then. I wonder if that is still available to new enrollees. Do they handle stock trades for free?
Safe Deposit boxes are the main banking service I use in branch. I can get cash at the ATM, in the branch or at the grocery store. I do everything I can online or electronically, but ONLY if there is no fee. I still use a lot of cash. I pay cash for gas because I can save so much money at ARCO. (About 25 cents a gallon). They charge 45 cents to use a debit card, so I don't do that, and of course ARCO stopped taking credit cards 25 years ago. We are really big on going to locally owned small businesses when we can, and more and more of them are so fed up with credit card fees that they have gone cash only.I just use my Fidelity brokerage account for banking. Free checks, interest, free ATMs, and no minimum balance. Downside is there are no brick and mortar bank branches in the traditional sense. I found I never really went to the bank anyway so I closed my USBank account.
If you click on the link in the following article, you will see a list of check printers who meet certain security standards of
Check Payment Systems Association.
Read more: http://www.bankrate.com/finance/checking/cheap-checks-vulnerable-to-fraud.aspx#ixzz4V19RCs6T
Harland Clarke, which prints Costco checks is on the list of printers who meet the standard. Don't know who prints WalMart checks, but one of the other vendors mentioned in this thread is not on the list.
Indeed, the afore-linked article uses Costco checks to show examples of good check printing practices....
My bank printed me a page of 4 checks 8 years ago when I opened the account, for free. I still have 2 of them.![]()
I wrote just 6 checks in December.My bank will print out at the actual bank location 1 page for you with no charge (it's been a year or so since we last did this so I'm going off the assumption it is still the case). We hardly ever write checks so we don't want to go buying any of them at this time.
I got a box of checks 10 1/12 years ago when I first opened my account when I was 18 and I still have one of the booklets with a decent number of checks left....I only ever wrote checks for rent back in the day, DMV when they didn't accept debit/credit cards or there was some other reason did use debit/credit, etc. I currently only write checks for escrow shortage and I'm sure there are some random ones I'm not thinking of.
My mom still writes a lot more checks than I do.I wrote just 6 checks in December.
1) Property taxes. They charge a fee for e-checks, and $27.50 service charge for credit cards, a stamp is a LOT cheaper.
2) Beauty salon. They are cash or check only
3) Long term care insurance. I was amazed, this company has no provision for any credit card or electronic payments.
4) Schwans. By my choice because they will take credit cards.
5) Auto mechanic. He is cash or check only.
6) Dues for a civic club I belong too. They have no provision for credit cards of e payment.
I'd be mad if I had to pay anything for check printing, and I would be fuming if it was $60.Lucky that you can buy cheques from an outside source. In Canada there are on a couple of companies that print cheques and to get to them you have to go through the banks as the bank has to authorize them to print the cheques. So yep $60 to buy cheques.