Chase holds same-county check for 15 days
A Chase customer had a check from another bank in the same county held for 15 days before funds became available, well beyond what the physical proximity of the issuing bank would suggest is necessary. The extended hold ties up funds the customer expected to access quickly given the local nature of the transaction.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyBanks Change Check Deposit Hold Dates After Confirming Availability
Small business owners deposit checks and receive receipts showing 2-day availability, only to find the hold silently extended to 7-8 days with no explanation. The sender's account confirms the funds are withdrawn, yet the receiving bank withholds access. Repeated occurrences cause predictable cash flow disruption and client relationship damage for businesses dependent on timely check clearing.
Banks place extended holds on checks already cleared by the issuer
Customers depositing checks face multi-week holds even after the issuing bank confirms funds have cleared, leaving them unable to access their own money. Banks cite risk policies but apply holds inconsistently and without transparent recourse. The practice disproportionately affects customers who depend on timely check deposits for cash flow.
Bank transfer holds leave customers unable to access their own funds
A customer who transferred funds from another bank into Chase found the money placed on an automatic hold for up to 5 days with no way to have it manually released, even to cover bills due within that window. Multiple support agents and departments confirmed the hold was automatic and irreversible, with no clear path to expedited access.
Banks holding 95% of deposited check funds for 7-10 days
Banks systematically place excessive holds on deposited checks even after they clear, withholding the majority of funds from customers who depend on timely access. The holds are applied repeatedly to the same customer without explanation. This disproportionately affects users managing tight cash flow who have no alternative while the bank earns float.
Bank of America Places Check Holds on Long-Tenured Business Customers Including Government Checks
Bank of America imposes multi-day check holds on deposits from 15-year business customers, even for government-issued checks that carry minimal default risk. Loyal business customers are treated identically to new accounts, with no trust differentiation based on relationship history. This delays cash flow unnecessarily and signals a lack of customer-centric risk modeling.
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