Anonymous wrote:I am the OP and I don't think I may have properly communicated my concern.
I rarely pay with paper checks, but certain vendors still require them. For example, I still pay the landscape guy with a check, most small contractors who occasionally work on my home require a paper check. The paper check has my name, home address, bank routing number and account number.
Whoever has a copy of my check, can now go and pay most of their bills using an electronic check online, which only requires my routing number and account number. Isn't that a major security flaw?
Anonymous wrote:I am the OP and I don't think I may have properly communicated my concern.
I rarely pay with paper checks, but certain vendors still require them. For example, I still pay the landscape guy with a check, most small contractors who occasionally work on my home require a paper check. The paper check has my name, home address, bank routing number and account number.
Whoever has a copy of my check, can now go and pay most of their bills using an electronic check online, which only requires my routing number and account number. Isn't that a major security flaw?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?
Not sure but someone did just this with my mother’s account to pay their credit card and power bills a few months ago. Her bank is Truist and they were NOT helpful at all at first.
You open a second bank account (at another bank) with a small balance and use that to write checks against. Limit the risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the OP and I don't think I may have properly communicated my concern.
I rarely pay with paper checks, but certain vendors still require them. For example, I still pay the landscape guy with a check, most small contractors who occasionally work on my home require a paper check. The paper check has my name, home address, bank routing number and account number.
Whoever has a copy of my check, can now go and pay most of their bills using an electronic check online, which only requires my routing number and account number. Isn't that a major security flaw?
I'm pretty sure my bank sends me an alert everytime I use the bank routing number and account number method to pay a bill. Most recently it was for DC property taxes. So at least I would get an alert if, for example, someone in DC tax office were to use my bank routing number and account number to pay for their bill. I guess that's cold comfort. Just keep my fingers crossed that someone won't do that.
To follow up-- I do like that suggestion to have a separate bank account just for paying these occasional bills.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the OP and I don't think I may have properly communicated my concern.
I rarely pay with paper checks, but certain vendors still require them. For example, I still pay the landscape guy with a check, most small contractors who occasionally work on my home require a paper check. The paper check has my name, home address, bank routing number and account number.
Whoever has a copy of my check, can now go and pay most of their bills using an electronic check online, which only requires my routing number and account number. Isn't that a major security flaw?
I'm pretty sure my bank sends me an alert everytime I use the bank routing number and account number method to pay a bill. Most recently it was for DC property taxes. So at least I would get an alert if, for example, someone in DC tax office were to use my bank routing number and account number to pay for their bill. I guess that's cold comfort. Just keep my fingers crossed that someone won't do that.
Anonymous wrote:I am the OP and I don't think I may have properly communicated my concern.
I rarely pay with paper checks, but certain vendors still require them. For example, I still pay the landscape guy with a check, most small contractors who occasionally work on my home require a paper check. The paper check has my name, home address, bank routing number and account number.
Whoever has a copy of my check, can now go and pay most of their bills using an electronic check online, which only requires my routing number and account number. Isn't that a major security flaw?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?
Not sure but someone did just this with my mother’s account to pay their credit card and power bills a few months ago. Her bank is Truist and they were NOT helpful at all at first.
Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?
What is this, 2001?
Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?
Anonymous wrote:Literally all these companies require is a routing number and bank account number. These are clearly printed on any check. How can I be protected? I try to only use paper checks if I absolutely have to, but technically, what stops a criminal from using the info on a check to pay bills online that way?