Parts of a Bank Check
Your name, your home or business address, your telephone number and sometimes your driver's license are imprinted in this section. Do not have your Social Security number put on your checks; that's an invitation to identity theft.
The upper right corner holds the number of the check, a very helpful item for identifying the number of checks written and a necessary element for bookkeeping.- This section holds the name of the person, company, business or service you are giving money to, also called the payee.
- The date the check was written goes just above "Pay to the Order of." It is ill advised, and in some states illegal, to post-date a check. If you write a check and do not intend on paying, this is a type of fraud. When you open a bank account, you agree to their rules, so read them carefully.
The long empty line is where you write out how much the check is worth, for example, "Twenty-three dollars." There is also a box with a "$" sign where the money amount is written in numbers. If they are different amounts, the longhand version is used.
The "For" (or Memo line) is where you can make a notation about what the check was for. Your signature is placed on the line opposite this.- The first series of numbers (usually framed by colons ":") are the identifying numbers of the bank or banking institution. The next set of numbers is the check number (the same as the one in the upper right). The last set of numbers is your bank account number (usually a checking account number).
Upper Left-hand Corner
Upper Right-hand Corner
"Pay to The Order of"
The Date
The Dollars Section
The "For" or "Memo" Line and the "Signature" Line
Numbers at Margin's Edge
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