Common use of Your Account Balance Clause in Contracts

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 2 contracts

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement, Membership and Account Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill xxxx payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill xxxx for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may will be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay Courtesy Pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill xxxx payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill xxxx payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill xxxx for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay Courtesy Pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill xxxx payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay Courtesy Pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone phone, or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges charges, or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill payments payments, and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

AutoNDA by SimpleDocs

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may will be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay Courtesy Pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

Your Account Balance. Your account has two kinds of balances: the actual balance and the available balance. Both can be checked by reviewing your account online, at an ATM, by phone or at a branch. It is important to understand how the two balances work so that you know how much money is in your account at any given time. The actual balance is the amount of money that is actually in your account at any given time. It reflects transactions that have actually posted to your account but not transactions that have been authorized and are pending. While the term “actual” may sound as though the number you see is an up-to-date display of what is in your account that you can spend, that is not always the case. Any purchases, holds, fees, other charges or deposits made on your account that have not yet posted will not appear in your actual balance. For example: If you have a $50 actual balance, but you just wrote a check for $40, then your actual balance is $50 but it does not reflect the pending check transaction. So at that point, you actually have $50, but you have already spent $40. Your available balance is the amount of money in your account that is available to you to use without incurring a non-sufficient funds (NSF) or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee. The available balance takes into account things like holds placed on deposits, pending transactions (such as pending debit card purchases) that have been authorized for the merchant but not posted to your account, authorized automatic bill xxxx payments and other outstanding transactions that have not posted to your account. For example: Assume you have an actual balance of $50 and an available balance of $50. If you were to use your debit card at a restaurant to buy lunch for $20, then that merchant could ask us to pre-authorize the payment. In that case, we will put a “hold” on your account for $20. Your actual balance would still be $50 because this transaction has not yet posted, but your available balance would be $30 because you have committed to pay the restaurant $20. When the restaurant submits its bill xxxx for payment (which could be a few days later), we will post the transaction to your account and your actual balance will be reduced by $20. The available balance is the balance used to determine if items are subsequently presented against insufficient funds or the amount that would overdraw your account and incur fees. You may be charged an NSF or WeGotYa/courtesy pay or overdraft fee for a transaction based on the available balance even if the actual balance would have been sufficient to cover the amount of the transaction. The following example illustrates how this works: Assume your actual and available balances are both $50, and you swipe your debit card at a restaurant for $20. A hold is placed on your account, so your available balance is only $30. Your actual balance is still $50. Before the restaurant charge is sent to us for processing, a check that you wrote for $40 clears. Because you have only $30 available (you have committed to pay the restaurant $20), your account will be overdrawn by $10, even though your actual balance is $50. In this case, we may pay the $40 check, but you may be charged a WeGotYa/courtesy pay fee. That fee will be deducted from your account, further reducing the balance. It is very important to understand that you may still overdraw your account even though the available balance appears to show there are sufficient funds to cover a transaction that you want to make. This is because your available balance may not reflect all your outstanding checks and automatic bill xxxx payments that you have authorized, or other outstanding transactions that have not been paid from your account. In the example above, the outstanding check will not be reflected in your available balance until it is presented to us and paid from your account. In addition, your available balance may not reflect all of your debit card transactions. For example, if a merchant obtains our prior authorization but does not submit a one-time debit card transaction for payment within two (2) calendar days of authorization, we must release the authorization hold on the transaction. The available balance will not reflect this transaction once the hold has been released until the debit card transaction has been received by us and paid from your account.

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Membership and Account Agreement

Time is Money Join Law Insider Premium to draft better contracts faster.