Anonymous wrote:Pp, you can deposit as much as you want. Over $10k the bank has to file a report. As long as you can explain the aource of the money you have no issue. Depositing more than $10k over twomdays may get you in trouble for trying to avoid the reporting requirement. It is called structuring. Do not do this! https://www.money-education.com/resources/financial-planning-news-and-blogs/blog/129-structuring-cash-transactions-under-10-000-is-criminal
Anonymous wrote:When i realized how much I had on hand, I didn't feel like it was safe having so much at home where it could get stolen or destroyed. And that i guess is anxiety causing, along with people looking at me like a freak having so much cash on hand.
Anonymous wrote:Like 18:04 I had relatives who gave us cash, and in some cases I just cashed the checks setting it aside not wanting to comingle it with my savings. People wanted me to spend on turnings I wouldn't otherwise buy myself or my kids. It became a habit. My husband and I are pretty good savers, but he sees all money as fungible. Meaning: if I put it into savings and we needed to replace an appliance, the money would be used for that. I don't like it, because I do earmark money, and won't "splurge" on any thing unless it it over the earmarked value. Our HHI is mid 100k. We have retirement savings and emergency fund account. Our financial advisor said we could afford to spend a little more, but I'm paranoid about not having money if "something bad" happened.
Ugh. Reading this thread I'm feeling like I might look like a criminal for hoarding this money that trickled in over 20 years. I want to cry. I'm so pathetic.
Anonymous wrote:So take all my kids' bday and Christmas paper cash to bank , and pay off my debt (house) and into my retirement account?
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it's really "extra money"?
Do you have any debt? What type and at what %
Are you maxing retirement savings?
Are you regularly contributing (monthly, etc) to 529 for kids?
Do you have a car, is it paid off, and when will you have to replace it?
Do you have 6 months of emergency living expenses?
If you have extra after all of the above, put it in a savings or money market account at 1% interest, that you can access in a few days time but is not automatically linked to your checking account, if you have trouble with that. Capital One 360 cash account is a good suggestion.
Definitely not in the house--if the house burns down or you get robbed, it is gone. You are FDIC insured up to 100k with a bank.