Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Yes, I know, but feels artificial to me to keep the "minimum" of the account at $2,000 more than it actually is. I balance my account online, so whenever I see the balance is $2,000 higher, it plays tricks on my mind that makes me think I have more money than I actually do. It's just a minor annoyance to have to have that feeling for two months.
Wait. Balancing your account online isn't balancing your account. The point of balancing it yourself is to catch mistakes that may be made by the bank; you'll never catch these if you check against their record exclusively. And furthermore, you won't know what you've put out as opposed to what you have sitting there, as you are seeing now.
We keep a shared google doc running where we essentially balance our checking account daily (or every other day). It's a copy of the bank's record, but by our account in real-time. Was tedious at first, but now habit. Works for us.
NP here. As compared to reviewing your account and transactions online, isn't the only advantage to this that you'll catch arithmetic errors and outstanding checks? Chances of an aritchmetic error are extremely low and if someone rarely writes checks or maintains a sufficiently high balance to cover the margin of error isn't this kind of a waste of time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Yes, I know, but feels artificial to me to keep the "minimum" of the account at $2,000 more than it actually is. I balance my account online, so whenever I see the balance is $2,000 higher, it plays tricks on my mind that makes me think I have more money than I actually do. It's just a minor annoyance to have to have that feeling for two months.
Wait. Balancing your account online isn't balancing your account. The point of balancing it yourself is to catch mistakes that may be made by the bank; you'll never catch these if you check against their record exclusively. And furthermore, you won't know what you've put out as opposed to what you have sitting there, as you are seeing now.
We keep a shared google doc running where we essentially balance our checking account daily (or every other day). It's a copy of the bank's record, but by our account in real-time. Was tedious at first, but now habit. Works for us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Yes, I know, but feels artificial to me to keep the "minimum" of the account at $2,000 more than it actually is. I balance my account online, so whenever I see the balance is $2,000 higher, it plays tricks on my mind that makes me think I have more money than I actually do. It's just a minor annoyance to have to have that feeling for two months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Yes, I know, but feels artificial to me to keep the "minimum" of the account at $2,000 more than it actually is. I balance my account online, so whenever I see the balance is $2,000 higher, it plays tricks on my mind that makes me think I have more money than I actually do. It's just a minor annoyance to have to have that feeling for two months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Yes, I know, but feels artificial to me to keep the "minimum" of the account at $2,000 more than it actually is. I balance my account online, so whenever I see the balance is $2,000 higher, it plays tricks on my mind that makes me think I have more money than I actually do. It's just a minor annoyance to have to have that feeling for two months.
Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.
Anonymous wrote:Why? You should be looking at your account as if the money isn't there as soon as the check is written and until it is cleared. If you have the money to cover the check, and you know that eventually it will get cashed, this is a non issue. You balance your acct as if it already gone.