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Cheque
Cheque
from Wikipedia

A cheque with Thomas Jefferson as payee and payor from 1809
A South African cheque from 1933

A cheque (or check in American English) is a document that orders a bank, building society, or credit union, to pay a specific amount of money from a person's account to the person in whose name the cheque has been issued. The person writing the cheque, known as the drawer, has a transaction banking account (often called a current, cheque, chequing, checking, or share draft account) where the money is held. The drawer writes various details including the monetary amount, date, and a payee on the cheque, and signs it, ordering their bank, known as the drawee, to pay the amount of money stated to the payee.

Although forms of cheques have been in use since ancient times and at least since the 9th century, they became a highly popular non-cash method for making payments during the 20th century and usage of cheques peaked. By the second half of the 20th century, as cheque processing became automated, billions of cheques were issued annually; these volumes peaked in or around the early 1990s.[1] Since then cheque usage has fallen, being replaced by electronic payment systems, such as debit cards, credit cards, and mobile payments. In an increasing number of countries cheques have either become a marginal payment system or have been completely phased out.[2][3]

Nature of a cheque

[edit]

A cheque is a negotiable instrument instructing a financial institution to pay a specific amount of a specific currency from a specified transactional account held in the drawer's name with that institution. Both the drawer and payee may be natural persons or legal entities. Cheques are order instruments, and are not in general payable simply to the bearer as bearer instruments are, but must be paid to the payee. In some countries, such as the US, the payee may endorse the cheque, allowing them to specify a third party to whom it should be paid.

Cheques are a type of bill of exchange that were developed as a way to make payments without the need to carry large amounts of money. Paper money evolved from promissory notes, another form of negotiable instrument similar to cheques in that they were originally a written order to pay the given amount to whoever had it in their possession (the "bearer").

Spelling and etymology

[edit]

Check is the original spelling in the English language.[4][5] The newer spelling, cheque (from the French), is believed to have come into use around 1828, when the switch was made by James William Gilbart in his Practical Treatise on Banking.[5] The spellings check, checque, and cheque were used interchangeably from the 17th century until the 20th century.[6] However, since the 19th century, in the Commonwealth and Ireland, the spelling cheque (from the French word chèque) has become standard for the financial instrument, while check is used only for other meanings, thus distinguishing the two definitions in writing.[nb 1]

In American English, the usual spelling for both is check.[8]

Etymological dictionaries attribute the financial meaning of check to come from "a check against forgery", with the use of "check" to mean "control" stemming from the check used in chess, a term which came into English through French, Latin, Arabic, and ultimately from the Persian word shah, or "king".[9][10]

History

[edit]

The cheque had its origins in the ancient banking system, in which bankers would issue orders at the request of their customers, to pay money to identified payees. Such an order was referred to as a bill of exchange. The use of bills of exchange facilitated trade by eliminating the need for merchants to carry large quantities of currency (for example, gold) to purchase goods and services.

Early years

[edit]

There is early evidence of using bill of exchange. In India, during the Maurya Empire (from 321 to 185 BC), a commercial instrument called the adesha was in use, which was an order on a banker desiring him to pay the money of the note to a third person.[11]

The ancient Romans are believed to have used an early form of cheque known as praescriptiones in the 1st century BC.[12][ISBN missing]

Beginning in the third century AD, banks in Persian territory began to issue letters of credit.[13] These letters were termed čak, meaning "document" or "contract".[14] The čak became the sakk later used by traders in the Abbasid Caliphate and other Arab-ruled lands.[15] Transporting a paper sakk was more secure than transporting money. In the ninth century, a merchant in one country could cash a sakk drawn on his bank in another country.[16] The Persian poet, Ferdowsi, used the term "cheque" several times in his famous book, Shahnameh, when referring to the Sasanid dynasty.

Ibn Hawqal, living in the 10th century, records the use of a cheque written in Aoudaghost which was worth 42,000 dinars.[17][18]

In the 13th century the bill of exchange was developed in Venice as a legal device to allow international trade without the need to carry large amounts of gold and silver. Their use subsequently spread to other European countries.

In the early 1500s, to protect large accumulations of cash, people in the Dutch Republic began depositing their money with "cashiers". These cashiers held the money for a fee. Competition drove cashiers to offer additional services including paying money to any person bearing a written order from a depositor to do so. They kept the note as proof of payment. This concept went on to spread to England and elsewhere.[19]

Modern era

[edit]
Barclays and Co. cheque for 39 pounds, 4 shillings, and 2 pence, issued in London by Messrs Barclay and Tritton, 1793, on display at the British Museum in London

By the 17th century, bills of exchange were being used for domestic payments in England. Cheques, a type of bill of exchange, then began to evolve. Initially, they were called drawn notes, because they enabled a customer to draw on the funds that he or she had in the account with a bank and required immediate payment. These were handwritten, and one of the earliest known still to be in existence was drawn on Messrs Morris and Clayton, scriveners and bankers based in the City of London, and dated 16 February 1659.[20]

In 1717, the Bank of England pioneered the first use of a pre-printed form. These forms were printed on "cheque paper" to prevent fraud, and customers had to attend in person and obtain a numbered form from the cashier. Once written, the cheque was brought back to the bank for settlement. The suppression of banknotes in eighteenth-century England further promoted the use of cheques.[21]

Until about 1770, an informal exchange of cheques took place between London banks. Clerks of each bank visited all the other banks to exchange cheques while keeping a tally of balances between them until they settled with each other. Daily cheque clearing began around 1770 when the bank clerks met at the Five Bells, a tavern in Lombard Street in the City of London, to exchange all their cheques in one place and settle the balances in cash. This was the first bankers' clearing house.

Provincial clearinghouses were established in major cities throughout the UK to facilitate the clearing of cheques on banks in the same town. Birmingham, Bradford, Bristol, Hull, Leeds, Leicester, Liverpool, Manchester, Newcastle, Nottingham, Sheffield, and Southampton all had their own clearinghouses.[22]

In America, the Bank of New York began issuing cheques after its establishment by Alexander Hamilton in 1784.[23] The oldest surviving example of a complete American chequebook from the 1790s was discovered by a family in New Jersey. The documents are in some ways similar to modern-day cheques, with some data pre-printed on sheets of paper alongside blank spaces for where other information could be hand-written as needed.[24]

It is thought that the Commercial Bank of Scotland was the first bank to personalize its customers' cheques, in 1811, by printing the name of the account holder vertically along the left-hand edge. In 1830 the Bank of England introduced books of 50, 100, and 200 forms and counterparts, bound or stitched. These cheque books became a common format for the distribution of cheques to bank customers.

In the late 19th century, several countries formalized laws regarding cheques. The UK passed the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, and India passed the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881;[25] which both covered cheques.

An English cheque from 1956 having a bank clerk's red mark verifying the signature, a two-pence stamp duty, and holes punched by hand to cancel it. This is a "crossed cheque" disallowing the transfer of payment to another account.

In 1931, an attempt was made to simplify the international use of cheques by the Geneva Convention on the Unification of the Law Relating to Cheques.[26] Many European and South American states, as well as Japan, joined the convention. However, countries including the US and members of the British Commonwealth did not participate and so it remained very difficult for cheques to be used across country borders.

In 1959 a standard for machine-readable characters (MICR) was agreed upon and patented in the US for use with cheques. This opened the way for the first automated reader/sorting machines for clearing cheques. As automation increased, the following years saw a dramatic change in the way in which cheques were handled and processed. Cheque volumes continued to grow; in the late 20th century, cheques were the most popular non-cash method for making payments, with billions of them processed each year. Most countries saw cheque volumes peak in the late 1980s or early 1990s, after which electronic payment methods became more popular and the use of cheques declined.

In 1969 cheque guarantee cards were introduced in several countries, allowing a retailer to confirm that a cheque would be honored when used at a point of sale. The drawer would sign the cheque in front of the retailer, who would compare the signature to the signature on the card and then write the cheque-guarantee-card number on the back of the cheque. Such cards were generally phased out and replaced by debit cards, starting in the mid-1990s.

From the mid-1990s, many countries enacted laws to allow for cheque truncation, in which a physical cheque is converted into electronic form for transmission to the paying bank or clearing-house. This eliminates the cumbersome physical presentation and saves time and processing costs.

In 2002, the Eurocheque system was phased out and replaced with domestic clearing systems. Old Eurocheques could still be used, but they were now processed by national clearing systems. At that time, several countries took the opportunity to phase out the use of cheques altogether. As of 2010, many countries have either phased out the use of cheques altogether or signaled that they would do so in the future.

Parts of a cheque

[edit]
Parts of a cheque based on a UK example
  1. Drawee
  2. Payee
  3. Date of issue
  4. Amount of currency
  5. Drawer
  6. Signature of drawer
  7. Machine-readable routing and account information

The four main items on a cheque are:

  • Drawer: the person or entity whose transaction account is to be drawn. Usually, the drawer's name and account is preprinted on the cheque, and the drawer is usually the signatory.
  • Payee: the person or entity who is to be paid the amount.
  • Drawee: the bank or other financial institution where the cheque can be presented for payment. This is usually preprinted on the cheque.
  • Amount: the currency amount. The amount and currency (e.g., dollars, pounds, etc.) usually must be written in words and in figures. The currency is usually the local currency, but may be a foreign currency.

As cheque usage increased during the 19th and 20th centuries, additional items were added to increase security or to make processing easier for the financial institution. A signature of the drawer was required to authorize the cheque, and this is the main way to authenticate the cheque. Second, it became customary to write the amount in words as well as in numbers to avoid mistakes and make it harder to fraudulently alter the amount after the cheque had been written. It is not a legal requirement to write the amount in words, although some banks will refuse to accept cheques that do not have the amount in both numbers and words.

An issue date was added, and cheques may become invalid a certain amount of time after issue. In the US and Canada,[27][28] a cheque is typically valid for six months after the date of issue, after which it is a stale-dated cheque, but this depends on where the cheque is drawn. In Australia, a cheque is typically valid for fifteen months of the cheque date.[29] A cheque that has an issue date in the future, a post-dated cheque, may not be able to be presented until that date has passed. In some countries writing a post dated cheque may simply be ignored or is illegal. Conversely, an antedated cheque has an issue date in the past.

A cheque number was added and cheque books were issued so that cheque numbers were sequential. This allowed for some basic fraud detection by banks and made sure one cheque was not presented twice.

In some countries, such as the US, cheques may contain a memo line where the purpose of the cheque can be indicated as a convenience without affecting the official parts of the cheque. In the United Kingdom a memo line is not available and such notes may be written on the reverse side of the cheque.

In the US, at the top (when cheque oriented vertically) of the reverse side of the cheque, there are usually one or more blank lines labelled something like "Endorse here".

Starting in the 1960s, machine-readable routing and account information was added to the bottom of cheques in MICR format, which allowed automated sorting and routing of cheques between banks and led to automated central clearing facilities. The information provided at the bottom of the cheque is country-specific and standards are set by each country's cheque clearing system. This means that the payee no longer has to go to the bank that issued the cheque, they can instead deposit it at their own bank or any other bank and the cheque would be routed back to the originating bank, and funds transferred to their own bank account.

In the US, the bottom 58-inch (16 mm)[30] of the cheque is reserved for MICR characters only. Intrusion into the MICR area can cause problems when the cheque runs through the clearinghouse, requiring someone to print an MICR cheque correction strip[31] and glue it to the cheque. Many new ATMs do not use deposit envelopes and actually scan the cheque at the time it is deposited and will reject[32] cheques due to handwriting incursion which interferes with reading the MICR. This can cause considerable inconvenience as the depositor may have to wait days for the bank to be open and may have difficulty getting to the bank even when they are open; this can delay the availability of the portion of a deposit which their bank makes available immediately as well as the balance of the deposit. Terms of service for many mobile (cell phone camera) deposits also require the MICR section to be readable. Not all of the MICR characters have been printed at the time the cheque is written, as additional characters will be printed later to encode the amount; thus a sloppy signature could obscure characters that will later be printed there. Since MICR characters are no longer necessarily printed in magnetic ink and will be scanned by optical rather than magnetic means, the readers will be unable to distinguish pen ink from pre-printed magnetic ink; these changes allow cheques to be printed on ordinary home and office printers without requiring pre-printed cheque forms, allow ATM deposit capture, allow mobile deposits, and facilitate electronic copies of cheques.

For additional protection, a cheque can be crossed, which restricts the use of the cheque so that the funds must be paid into a bank account. The format and wording varies from country to country, but generally two parallel lines may be placed either vertically across the cheque or in the top left hand corner. In addition the words 'or bearer' must not be used, or if pre-printed on the cheque must be crossed out on the payee line. If the cheque is crossed with the words 'Account Payee' or similar then the cheque can only be paid into the bank account of the person initially named as the payee, thus it cannot be endorsed to a different payee.

Attached documents

[edit]

Cheques sometimes include additional documents. A page in a chequebook may consist of both the cheque itself and a stub or counterfoil – when the cheque is written, only the cheque itself is detached, and the stub is retained in the chequebook as a record of the cheque. Alternatively, cheques may be recorded with carbon paper behind each cheque, in ledger sheets between cheques or at the back of a chequebook, or in a completely separate transaction register that comes with a chequebook.

When a cheque is mailed, a separate letter or "remittance advice" may be attached to inform the recipient of the purpose of the cheque – formally, which account receivable to credit the funds to. This is frequently done formally using a provided slip when paying a bill, or informally via a letter when sending an ad hoc cheque.

Usage

[edit]
Cheques may be valid regardless of amount.

Parties to regular cheques generally include a drawer, the depositor writing a cheque; a drawee, the financial institution where the cheque can be presented for payment; and a payee, the entity to whom the drawer issues the cheque. The drawer drafts or draws a cheque, which is also called cutting a cheque, especially in the US. There may also be a beneficiary—for example, in depositing a cheque with a custodian of a brokerage account, the payee will be the custodian, but the cheque may be marked "F/B/O" ("for the benefit of") the beneficiary.

Ultimately, there is also at least one endorsee which would typically be the financial institution servicing the payee's account, or in some circumstances may be a third party to whom the payee owes or wishes to give money.

A payee that accepts a cheque will typically deposit it in an account at the payee's bank, and have the bank process the cheque. In some cases, the payee will take the cheque to a branch of the drawee bank, and cash the cheque there. If a cheque is refused at the drawee bank (or the drawee bank returns the cheque to the bank that it was deposited at) because there are insufficient funds for the cheque to clear, it is said that the cheque has been dishonoured("bounced"). Once a cheque is approved and all appropriate accounts involved have been credited, the cheque is stamped with some kind of cancellation mark, such as a "paid" stamp. The cheque is now a cancelled cheque. Cancelled cheques are placed in the account holder's file. The account holder can request a copy of a cancelled cheque as proof of a payment. This is known as the cheque clearing cycle.

Cheques can be lost or go astray within the cycle, or be delayed if further verification is needed in the case of suspected fraud. A cheque may thus bounce some time after it has been deposited.

Symbolic cheques are used at events to depict money offered to the payee.

Following concerns about the amount of time it took the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company to clear cheques, the United Kingdom Office of Fair Trading set up a working group in 2006 to look at the cheque clearing cycle. Their report said that clearing times could be improved, but that the costs associated with speeding up the cheque clearing cycle could not be justified considering the use of cheques was declining.[33] However, they concluded the biggest problem was the unlimited time a bank could take to dishonour a cheque. To address this, changes were implemented so that the maximum time after a cheque was deposited that it could be dishonoured was six days, what was known as the "certainty of fate" principle.

An advantage to the drawer of using cheques instead of debit card transactions is that they know the drawer's bank will not release the money until several days later. Paying with a cheque without adequate funds backing it and later making a deposit to the account on which the cheque is drawn in order to cover the cheque amount is called "kiting" or "floating" and is generally illegal in the US, but applicable laws are rarely enforced unless the drawer uses multiple chequing accounts with multiple institutions to increase the delay or to steal funds.

Declining use

[edit]

Cheque usage has been declining since the 1990s, both for point of sale transactions (for which credit cards, debit cards or mobile payment apps are increasingly preferred) and for third party payments (for example, bill payments), where the emergence of telephone banking has accelerated the decline, online banking, and mobile banking. Being paper-based, cheques are costly for banks to process in comparison to electronic payments, so banks in many countries now discourage the use of cheques, either by charging for cheques or by making the alternatives more attractive to customers. In particular, the handling of money transfers requires more effort and is time-consuming. The cheque has to be handed over in person or sent through mail. The rise of automated teller machines (ATMs) means that small amounts of cash are often easily accessible, so that it is sometimes unnecessary to write a cheque for such amounts instead. A number of countries have announced or have already completed the end of cheques as a means of payment.[2][3]

In October 2023, the average American wrote just over one check that month, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. The average value of these checks was $504, suggesting that most checks were used for larger purchases. This marks a significant decline from the year 2000 when Americans wrote an average of 60 checks annually.[34]

Decline in Asia

[edit]

In many Asian countries, cheques were never widely used and generally only used by the wealthy, with cash being used for the majority of payments except for India, where cheque usage was prevalent. Where cheques were used they have been declining rapidly. By 2009 there was negligible consumer cheque usage in Japan, South Korea and Taiwan. This declining trend was accelerated by these developed markets advanced financial services infrastructure. Many of the developing countries in Asia have seen an increasing use of electronic payment systems, 'leap-frogging' the less efficient chequing system altogether.[35]

Decline in Europe

[edit]

In most European countries, cheques are now rarely used or have been completely phased out, even for third party payments except for the United Kingdom, France and Ireland. In most western European countries, it was standard practice for businesses to publish their bank details on invoices, to facilitate the receipt of payments by giro. Even before the introduction of online banking, it has been possible in some countries to make payments to third parties using ATMs, which may accurately and rapidly capture invoice amounts, due dates, and payee bank details via a bar code reader to reduce keying. In using a cheque, the onus is on the payee to initiate the payment, whereas with a giro transfer, the onus is on the payer to effect the payment.

In the United Kingdom, France and Ireland cheques continued to be used as cheque payments were free for the consumer. However these countries have also seen significant declines since 2000. Since 2001, businesses in the United Kingdom made more electronic payments than cheque payments. The UK Payments Council announced in 2011 that cheques would continue as long as customers needed them reversing a previous target to phase out cheques by 2018.[36]

France, remains well ahead of its European counterparts in the use of cheque payments, as seen in 2020 where it is estimated that more than 1 billion cheque payments were made, compared to Italy, the country with the next highest number of payments, with under 100 million.[37]

Decline in North America

[edit]

The United States relied heavily on cheques, due to the convenience it affords payers, and due to the absence of a high volume system for low value electronic payments.[38] In the US, an estimated 18.3 billion cheques were paid in 2012, with a value of $25.9 trillion.[39] However even in the United States cheque usage has seen significant decline.

Canada's usage of cheques is less than that of the US and is declining rapidly at the urging of the Canadian Banking Association.[40] The Government of Canada claims it is 6.5 times more expensive to mail a cheque than to make a direct deposit. The Canadian Payments Association reported that in 2012, cheque use in Canada accounted for only 40% of total financial transactions.[41]

Decline in Oceania

[edit]

Both Australia and New Zealand were heavy users of cheques during the later part of the 20th century. However, following global trends both countries have seen significant decline in the use of cheques.

In Australia, following global trends, the use of cheques continues to decline. In 1994 the value of daily cheque transactions was A$25 billion; by 2004 this had dropped to only A$5 billion, almost all of this for B2B transactions. Personal cheque use is practically non-existent thanks to the longstanding use of the EFTPOS system, BPAY, electronic transfers, and debit cards. The Australian payment systems strategic plan has said it will remove cheques by 2030.[42]

In New Zealand, payments by cheque have declined from the mid-1990s in favour of electronic payment methods. In 1993, cheques accounted for over half of transactions through the national banking system, with an annual average of 130 cheques per capita. By 2006, cheques lagged well behind EFTPOS (debit card) transaction and electronic credits, making up only nine per cent of transactions, an annual average of 41 cheque transactions per capita.[43] Cheques were phased out completely in 2020 and no bank nor retailer accepts them in any form.

Alternatives to cheques

[edit]

Payment systems other than cheques include:

  1. Cash
  2. Debit card payments
  3. Credit card payments
  4. Direct debit (initiated by payee)
  5. Direct credit (initiated by payer), ACH in US, giro in Europe, Direct Entry in Australia
  6. Wire transfer (local and international) via banks and credit unions or else via major private vendors such as Western Union and MoneyGram
  7. Electronic bill payments using Internet banking
  8. Online payment services, e.g. WeChat Pay, Alipay, PayPal, Venmo, Unified Payments Interface, PhonePe, and Paytm
  9. Money orders or postal orders

Variations on regular cheques

[edit]

In addition to regular cheques, a number of variations were developed to address specific needs or address issues when using a regular cheque.

Cashier's cheques and bank drafts

[edit]

Cashier's cheques and banker's drafts, also known as bank cheques, banker's cheques or treasurer's cheques, are cheques issued against the funds of a financial institution rather than an individual account holder. Typically, the term cashier's check is used in the US and banker's draft is used in the UK and most of the Commonwealth. The mechanism differs slightly from country to country but in general the bank issuing the cheque or draft will allocate the funds at the point the cheque is drawn. This provides a guarantee, save for a failure of the bank, that it will be honoured. Cashier's cheques are perceived to be as good as cash but they are still a cheque, a misconception sometimes exploited by scam artists. A lost or stolen cheque can still be stopped like any other cheque, so payment is not completely guaranteed.

Certified cheque

[edit]

When a certified cheque is drawn, the bank operating the account verifies there are currently sufficient funds in the drawer's account to honour the cheque. Those funds are then set aside in the bank's internal account until the cheque is cashed or returned by the payee. Thus, a certified cheque cannot "bounce", and its liquidity is similar to cash, absent failure of the bank. The bank indicates this fact by making a notation on the face of the cheque (technically called an acceptance).

Payroll cheque

[edit]

A cheque used to pay wages may be referred to as a payroll cheque. Even when the use of cheques for paying wages and salaries became rare, the vocabulary "pay cheque" still remained commonly used to describe the payment of wages and salaries. Payroll cheques issued by the military to soldiers, or by some other government entities to their employees, beneficiants, and creditors, are referred to as warrants.

Warrants

[edit]

Warrants look like cheques and clear through the banking system like cheques, but are not drawn against cleared funds in a deposit account. A cheque differs from a warrant in that the warrant is not necessarily payable on demand and may not be negotiable.[44] They are often issued by government entities such as the military to pay wages or suppliers. In this case they are an instruction to the entity's treasurer department to pay the warrant holder on demand or after a specified maturity date.

Traveller's cheque

[edit]

A traveller's cheque is designed to allow the person signing it to make an unconditional payment to someone else as a result of paying the issuer for that privilege. Traveller's cheques can usually be replaced if lost or stolen, and people frequently used them on holiday instead of cash as many businesses used to accept traveller's cheques as currency. The use of credit or debit cards has begun to replace the traveller's cheque as the standard for vacation money due to their convenience and additional security for the retailer. As a result, many businesses no longer accept traveller's cheques.

Money or postal order

[edit]

A cheque sold by a post office, bank, or merchant such as a grocery store for payment in favour of a third party is referred to as a money order or postal order. These are paid for in advance when the order is drawn and are guaranteed by the institution that issues them and can only be paid to the named third party. This was a common way to send low value payments to third parties, avoiding the risks associated with sending cash by post, prior to the advent of electronic payment methods.

Oversized cheques

[edit]
Presentation of the Ansari X Prize $10 million award

Oversized cheques, also commonly referred to as novelty cheques, are often used in public events such as donating money to charity, announcing government grants,[45] or giving out prizes such as those from lotteries or Publishers Clearing House sweepstakes. The cheques are commonly 18 by 36 inches (46 cm × 91 cm) in size;[46] however, according to the Guinness Book of World Records, the largest ever is 12 by 25 metres (39 ft × 82 ft).[47]

Until recently,[when?][citation needed] regardless of the size, such cheques could still be redeemed for their cash value as long as they would have the same parts as a normal cheque, although usually the oversized cheque is kept as a souvenir and a normal cheque is provided.[48] Any bank could levy additional charges for clearing an oversized cheque. Most banks need to have the machine-readable information on the bottom of cheques read electronically, so only very limited dimensions can be allowed due to standardised equipment.

Contemporary oversized checks feature creative design elements including brand-integrated color schemes and event-specific imagery, while omitting sensitive banking information such as account numbers for security purposes.[49]

Payment vouchers

[edit]

In the US some public assistance programmes such as the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children, or Aid to Families with Dependent Children make vouchers available to their beneficiaries, which are good up to a certain monetary amount for purchase of grocery items deemed eligible under the particular programme. The voucher can be deposited like any other cheque by a participating supermarket or other approved business.

Cheques around the world

[edit]

Australia

[edit]

The Australian Cheques Act 1986 is the body of law governing the issuance of cheques and payment orders in Australia. Procedural and practical issues governing the clearance of cheques and payment orders are handled by Australian Payments Clearing Association (APCA).

In 1999, banks adopted a system to allow faster clearance of cheques by electronically transmitting information about cheques; this brought clearance times down from five to three days. Previously, cheques were required to be physically transported to the paying bank before processing began, and dishonoured cheques were physically returned.

In June 2023 the Australian government announced it was moving to phase out the use of cheques by 2030.[3]

Canada

[edit]

In Canada, cheques standards and processing are overseen by Payments Canada.[50][51] Canadian cheques can legally be written in English, French or Inuktitut. For a period Canada also had a tele-cheque, which was a paper payment item that resembles a cheque except that it is neither created nor signed by the payer—instead it is created (and may be signed) by a third party on behalf of the payer. Under CPA Rules these were prohibited in the clearing system effective 1 January 2004.[52]

Canada's usage of cheques is less than that of the US and has been declining rapidly at the urging of the Canadian Banking Association since 2000.[53] The Government of Canada claims it is 6.5 times more expensive to mail a cheque than to make a direct deposit. The Canadian Payments Association reported that in 2012, cheque use in Canada accounted for only 40% of total financial transactions.[54] The Interac system, which allows instant fund transfers via chip or magnetic strip and PIN, is widely used by merchants to the point that few brick and mortar merchants accept cheques.

The Canadian government began phasing out all government cheques from April 2016.[55]

India

[edit]
A sample cheque issued by UCO Bank in India

Cheques were first used in India by the Bank of Hindustan, the first joint stock bank established in 1770. In 1881, the Negotiable Instruments Act (NI Act)[56] was enacted in India, formalising the usage and characteristics of instruments like the cheque, the bill of exchange, and promissory note. The NI Act provided a legal framework for non-cash paper payment instruments in India.[25] In 1938, the Calcutta Clearing Banks' Association, which was the largest bankers' association at that time, adopted clearing house.[25]

Beginning in 2010, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) along with the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) piloted the cheque truncation system (CTS). Under CTS, cheques are no longer physically transported to different clearing houses. They are processed at the bank where they are presented, where an image of the cheque using Magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) is captured and digitally transmitted.[57][58]

In 2009 cheques were still widely used as a means of payment in trade, and also by individuals to pay other individuals or utility bills. One of the reasons was that banks usually provided cheques for free to their individual account holders. However, cheques are now rarely accepted at point of sale in retail stores where cash and cards are payment methods of choice. Electronic payment transfer continued to gain popularity in India and like other countries this caused a subsequent reduction in volumes of cheques issued each year. In 2009 the Reserve Bank of India reported there was a five percent decline in cheque usage compared to the previous year.[citation needed] In 2019, the Reserve Bank of India reported that while cheque usage continued to decline, the decrease was slow. The bank attributed the slow pace of the decline due to the fact that cheque volume had briefly increased after demonetisation in 2016 before continuing to fall, as well as the efficiency of India's cheque clearing system.[59]

Israel

[edit]

Cheques were widely used in the retail market, between persons, and for other payments. The law rules that payments in cash cannot exceed 6,000 NIS, so cheque payment is a legal term when that maximum is reached. It was possible to pay at the cash desk at the supermarket or shop by cheque or issue a check for annual school payments for a child. Utility bills and property tax can be paid by cheque at the post office. Moreover, usually tenant issues twelve post-dated cheques to the landlord after signing the rental agreement: one cheque per month of the rental term; additional cheques signed by a tenant with an open date and amount for utility providers to ensure that the tenant will leave no debts.

Ten bounced cheques during a year would result in the restriction of cheques for the account, and the bank will bounce new cheques for a year. If the account owner continues to draw cheques during the restriction period, that person's accounts in Israeli banks will be denied from issuing cheques.

Japan

[edit]

In Japan, cheques are called kogitte (小切手), and are governed by kogitte law [ja].

Bounced cheques are called Fuwatari Kogitte (不渡り [ja]小切手). If an account owner bounces two cheques in six months, the bank will suspend the account for two years. If the account belongs to a public company, their stock will also be suspended from trading on the stock exchange, which can lead to bankruptcy.

New Zealand

[edit]

Instrument-specific legislation includes the Cheques Act 1960, part of the Bills of Exchange Act 1908, which codifies aspects related to the cheque payment instrument, notably the procedures for the endorsement, presentment and payment of cheques. A 1995 amendment provided for the electronic presentment of cheques and removed the previous requirement to deliver cheques physically to the paying bank, opening the way for cheque truncation and imaging.

In New Zealand, cheques once banked were processed electronically together with other retail payment instruments. Homeguard v Kiwi Packaging is often cited case law regarding the banking of cheques tendered as full settlement of disputed accounts.[60]

In New Zealand, payments by cheque have declined since the mid-1990s in favour of electronic payment methods. In 1993, cheques accounted for over half of transactions through the national banking system, with an annual average of 130 cheques per capita. By 2006 cheques lagged well behind EFTPOS (debit card) transaction and electronic credits, making up only nine per cent of transactions, an annual average of 41 cheque transaction per capita.[61]

In 2020 New Zealand Banks began phasing out of cheques, and they are no longer accepted as payment. All have moved to other types of payment systems.[62][63]Kiwibank stopped accepting cheques as payment on 28 February 2020,[64] followed by ANZ on 31 May 2021. Westpac and BNZ stopped accepting cheques on 25 June and 30 June 2021 respectively; ASB was the last major bank to phase out cheques on 27 August 2021.[2][65]

Poland

[edit]

Poland withdrew cheques from use in 2006, mainly because of lack of popularity due to the widespread adoption of credit and debit cards. Electronic payments across the European Union became fast and inexpensive—usually free for consumers.

Turkey

[edit]

In Turkey, cheques were usually used for commercial transactions only, and using post-dated cheques is legally permissible.[66]

United Kingdom

[edit]

In the United Kingdom, all cheques must conform to an industry standard detailing layout and font ("Cheque and Credit Clearing Company (C&CCC) Standard 3"), be printed on a specific weight of paper (CBS1), and contain explicitly defined security features.

Since 1995, all cheque printers must be members of the Cheque Printer Accreditation Scheme (CPAS). The scheme is managed by the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company and requires that all cheques for use in the British clearing process are produced by accredited printers who have adopted stringent security standards.

The rules concerning crossed cheques are set out in Section 1 of the Cheques Act 1992 and prevent cheques being cashed by or paid into the accounts of third parties. On a crossed cheque the words "account payee only" (or similar) are printed between two parallel vertical lines in the centre of the cheque. This makes the cheque non-transferable and is to avoid cheques being endorsed and paid into an account other than that of the named payee. Crossing cheques basically ensures that the money is paid into an account of the intended beneficiary of the cheque.

Following concerns about the amount of time it took banks to clear cheques, the United Kingdom Office of Fair Trading set up a working group in 2006 to look at the cheque clearing cycle. They produced a report[33] recommending maximum times for the cheque clearing which were introduced in UK from November 2007.[67] In the report the date the credit appeared on the recipient's account (usually the day of deposit) was designated "T". At "T + 2" (two business days afterwards) the value would count for calculation of credit interest or overdraft interest on the recipient's account. At "T + 4" clients would be able to withdraw funds on current accounts or at "T + 6" on savings accounts (though this will often happen earlier, at the bank's discretion). "T + 6" is the last day that a cheque can bounce without the recipient's permission—this is known as "certainty of fate". Before the introduction of this standard (also known as 2-4-6 for current accounts and 2-6-6 for savings accounts), the only way to know the "fate" of a cheque has been "Special Presentation", which would normally involve a fee, where the drawee bank contacts the payee bank to see if the payee has that money at that time. "Special Presentation" had been stated at the time of deposit.

Cheque volumes peaked in 1990 when four billion cheque payments were made. Of these, 2.5 billion were cleared through the inter-bank clearing managed by the C&CCC, the remaining 1.5 billion being in-house cheques which were either paid into the branch on which they were drawn or processed intra-bank without going through the clearings. As volumes started to fall, the challenges faced by the clearing banks were then of a different nature: how to benefit from technology improvements in a declining business environment.

Although the UK did not adopt the euro as its national currency when other European countries did in 1999, many banks began offering euro denominated accounts with chequebooks, principally to business customers. The cheques can be used to pay for certain goods and services in the UK. The same year, the C&CCC set up the euro cheque clearing system to process euro denominated cheques separately from sterling cheques in Great Britain.

The UK Payments Council from 30 June 2011 withdrew the existing Cheque Guarantee Card Scheme in the UK.[68] This service allowed cheques to be guaranteed at point of sales up to a certain value, normally £50 or £100, when signed in front of the retailer with the additional cheque guarantee card. This was after a long period of decline in their use in favour of debit cards.

In December 2009 the Payments Council announced its intention to phase out the use of cheques completely in the UK by October 2018, so long as adequate alternatives were developed.[69] They intended to perform annual checks on the progress of other payments systems and a final review of the decision would have been held in 2016.[70] However, the decision was reversed in 2011 after vocal public, political, and industrial opposition, and cheques have remained in use.[71][72]

Since 2001, businesses in the United Kingdom have made more electronic payments than cheque payments. Automated payments rose from 753 million in 1995 to 1.1 billion in 2001 and cheques declined in that same period of time from 1.14 to 1.1 billion payments.[73] Most British utility companies charge lower prices to customers who pay by direct debit than for other payment methods.

The vast majority of British retailers no longer accept cheques as a means of payment. Shell announced in September 2005 that it would no longer accept cheques at their UK petrol stations, a change replicated by other major fuel retailers.[74] Within a year, Asda, Boots, Currys and WH Smith had all phased out the acceptance of cheques.[75][76]

In 2016, 432 million inter-bank cheques and credit-items worth £472 billion were processed in the United Kingdom.[77] In 2017, 405 million cheques worth £356 billion were used for payments and acquiring cash, an average of 1.2 million cheques per day, with more than 10 million being cleared in Northern Ireland alone. The Cheque and Credit Clearing Company noted that cheques continue to be highly valued for paying tradesmen and utility bills, and play a vital role in business, clubs and societies sectors, with nine in 10 business saying that they received or made payment by cheque on a monthly basis.[78] In 2022, 150 million cheques were used to make payments in the UK, compared to 1.6 billion payments in 2006.[79] UK Finance estimates that only 0.2% of payments (70 million transactions) will be made by cheque in 2031.[79]

In June 2014, following a successful trial in the UK by Barclays, the UK government gave the go-ahead for a cheque truncation system, allowing people to pay in a cheque by taking a photo of it, rather than physically depositing the paper cheque at a bank.[80] Between 2017 and 2019, the Barclays scheme was rolled out nationwide as the Image Clearing System which has sped up the processing of cheques, reducing clearing times, and allowing customers to deposit them at ATMs and through mobile and online banking applications.[81][82] Mobile banking has modernised the use of cheques; in the first 6 months of 2021, 3.8 million cheques were deposited by Lloyds Bank customers.[83] Nevertheless, in 2020-21, the use of cheques declined by 19% year on year.[79]

Cheques are still held to be a secure and reliable means of payment: cheque fraud in the UK in 2020 totalled just £12.3 million across 185 million transactions. In the same period, online authorised payment scams totalled £479 million across 4.1 billion online payments. As such, cheques have seen a resurgence in popularity in commercial transactions from businesses to avoid the possibility of phishing fraud.[83]

United States

[edit]

In the United States, cheques are referred to as checks and are governed by Article 3 of the Uniform Commercial Code, under the rubric of negotiable instruments.[84]

  • An order check—the most common form in the US—is payable only to the named payee or endorsee, as it usually contains the language "Pay to the order of (name)".
  • A bearer check is payable to anyone who is in possession of the document: this would be the case if the cheque does not name a payee, or is payable to "bearer" or to "cash" or "to the order of cash", or if the cheque is payable to someone who is not a person or legal entity, for example if the payee line is marked "Happy Birthday".
  • A counter check is one that a bank issues to an account holder in person. This is typically done for customers who have opened a new account or have run out of personalized cheques. It may lack the usual security features.

In the US, the terminology for a cheque historically varied with the type of financial institution on which it is drawn. In the case of a savings and loan association it was a negotiable order of withdrawal (compare Negotiable Order of Withdrawal account); if a credit union it was a share draft. "Checks" were associated with chartered commercial banks. However, common usage has increasingly conformed to more recent versions of Article 3, where check means any or all of these negotiable instruments. Certain types of cheques drawn on government agencies, especially payroll cheques, may be called warrants.

At the bottom of each cheque there is the routing/account number in MICR format. The ABA routing transit number is a nine-digit number in which the first four digits identifies the US Federal Reserve Bank's cheque-processing centre. This is followed by digits 5 through 8, identifying the specific bank served by that cheque-processing centre. Digit 9 is a verification check digit, computed using a complex algorithm of the previous eight digits.[85]

  • Typically the routing number is followed by a group of eight or nine MICR digits that indicates the particular account number at that bank. The account number is assigned independently by the various banks.
  • Typically the account number is followed by a group of three or four MICR digits that indicates a particular cheque number from that account.
  • Directional routing number—also known as the transit number, consists of a denominator mirroring the first four digits of the routing number, and a hyphenated numerator, also known as the ABA number, in which the first part is a city code (1–49), if the account is in one of 49 specific cities, or a state code (50–99) if it is not in one of those specific cities; the second part of the hyphenated numerator mirrors the 5th through 8th digits of the routing number with leading zeros removed.[85]

A draft in the US Uniform Commercial Code is any bill of exchange, whether payable on demand or at a later date. If payable on demand it is a "demand draft", or if drawn on a financial institution, a cheque.

The electronic cheque or substitute cheque was formally adopted in the US in 2004 with the passing of the "Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act" (or Check 21 Act). This allowed the creation of electronic cheques and translation (truncation) of paper cheques into electronic replacements, reducing cost and processing time.

The specification for US cheques is given by ANSI committee X9 Technical Report 2.[86]

In 2002 the US still relied heavily on cheques due to the convenience afforded to payers, and due to the absence of a high volume system for low-value electronic payments.[38] In practice, transfers of less than about five dollars are extremely expensive, and transactions of less than 50c impossible (transaction fees swallow the payment or exceed it). The only methods generally available for individuals and small businesses to make payments electronically are electronic funds transfers (EFT) or accepting credit cards. EFT payments require a commercial chequing account (which often has higher fees and minimum balances than individual accounts) and a subscription to EFT service costing anywhere from $10 to $25 a month, plus 10¢ per transaction (making transactions of 10¢ or less impossible, and transactions under $1 very expensive.) Credit card payments cost the recipient (or the payer) 33¢ plus 3% of the transaction, making transactions of 33¢ or less impossible, and transactions of $1 or less have at least a 30% service charge. Generally, payments by cheque (as long as the payer has funds in their account) and the recipient deposits it to their bank account, regardless of amount, have a service charge to both parties of zero.

Since 2002, the decline in cheque usage seen around the world has also started in the US. The cheque, although not as common as it used to be, is still a long way from disappearing completely in the US.[87]

In the US, an estimated 18.3 billion cheques were paid in 2012, with a value of $25.9 trillion.[88]

About 70 billion cheques were written annually in the US by 2001,[38] though around 17 million adult Americans have no bank accounts.[89] Certain companies whom a person pays with a cheque will turn it into an Automated Clearing House (ACH) or electronic transaction. Banks try to save time processing cheques by sending them electronically between banks. Cheque clearing is usually done through an electronic cheque broker, such as The Clearing House, Viewpointe LLC or the Federal Reserve Banks. Copies of the cheques are stored at a bank or the broker, for periods up to 99 years, and this is why some cheque archives have grown to 20 petabytes. The access to these archives is now worldwide, as most bank programming is now done offshore.[citation needed] Many utilities and most credit cards will also allow customers to pay by providing bank information and having the payee draw payment from the customer's account (direct debit). Many people in the US pay their bills or transfer money via paper money orders, as these have security advantages over mailing cash and require no bank-account access.[38]

Cheque fraud

[edit]

Cheques have been a tempting target for criminals to steal money or goods from the drawer, payee or the banks. A number of measures have been introduced to combat fraud over the years. These range from things like writing a cheque so it is difficult to alter after it is drawn, to mechanisms like crossing a cheque so that it can only be paid into another bank's account providing some traceability. However, the inherent security weaknesses of cheques as a payment method, such as having only the signature as the main authentication method and not knowing if funds will be received until the clearing cycle is complete, have made them vulnerable to a number of different types of fraud.

Embezzlement

[edit]

Taking advantage of the float period (cheque kiting) to delay the notice of non-existent funds. This often involves trying to convince a merchant or other recipient, hoping the recipient will not suspect that the cheque will not clear, giving time for the fraudster to disappear.

Forgery

[edit]

Sometimes, forgery is the method of choice in defrauding a bank. One form of forgery involves the use of a victim's legitimate cheques, that have either been stolen and then cashed, or altering a cheque that has been legitimately written to the perpetrator, by adding words or digits to inflate the amount.

Identity theft

[edit]

Since cheques include significant personal information (name, account number, signature and in some countries driver's license number, the address or phone number of the account holder), they can be used for identity theft. The practice was discontinued as identity theft became widespread.

Dishonoured cheques

[edit]

A dishonoured cheque is literally one where the payment has not been honoured. i.e. The payment has been refused by the payer's bank, for many of various reasons. Colloquially, it is referred to as bounced. Such a cheque cannot be redeemed for its value and is worthless; they are also known as an RDI (returned deposit item), or NSF (non-sufficient funds) cheque. Cheques are usually dishonoured because the drawer's account has been frozen or limited, or because there are insufficient funds in the drawer's account when the cheque was redeemed. A cheque drawn on an account with insufficient funds is said to have bounced and may be called a rubber cheque.[90] Banks will typically charge customers for issuing a dishonoured cheque, and in some jurisdictions such an act is a criminal action. A drawer may also issue a stop on a cheque, instructing the financial institution not to honour a particular cheque.

In England and Wales, they are typically returned marked "Refer to Drawer"—an instruction to contact the person issuing the cheque for an explanation as to why the cheque was not honoured. This wording was brought in after a bank was successfully sued for libel after returning a cheque with the phrase "Insufficient Funds" after making an error—the court ruled that as there were sufficient funds the statement was demonstrably false and damaging to the reputation of the person issuing the cheque. Despite the use of this revised phrase, successful libel lawsuits brought against banks by individuals remained for similar errors.[91]

In Scotland, a cheque acts as an assignment of the amount of money to the payee. As such, if a cheque is dishonoured in Scotland, what funds are present in the bank account are "attached" and frozen, until either sufficient funds are credited to the account to pay the cheque, the drawer recovers the cheque and hands it into the bank, or the drawer obtains a letter from the payee stating that they have no further interest in the cheque.

A cheque may also be dishonoured because it is stale or not cashed within a "void after date". Many cheques have an explicit notice printed on the cheque that it is void after some period of days. In the US, banks are not required by the Uniform Commercial Code to honour a stale-dated cheque, which is a cheque presented six months after it is dated.[27]

Consumer reporting

[edit]

In the United States some consumer reporting agencies such as ChexSystems, Early Warning Services, and TeleCheck have been providing cheque verification services that track how people manage their chequing accounts. Banks use the agencies to screen chequing account applicants, and those with low debit scores are denied because banks cannot afford overdrawn accounts.[92][93][94]

In the United Kingdom, in common with other items such as Direct Debits or standing orders, dishonoured cheques can be reported on a customer's credit file, although not individually and this does not happen universally amongst banks. Dishonoured payments from current accounts can be marked in the same manner as missed payments on the customer's credit report.

Lock box

[edit]

Typically when customers pay bills with cheques (like gas or water bills), the mail will go to a "lock box" at the post office. There a bank will pick up all the mail, sort it, open it, take the cheques and remittance advice out, process it all through electronic machinery, and post the funds to the proper accounts. In modern systems, taking advantage of the Check 21 Act, as in the United States many cheques are transformed into electronic objects and the paper is destroyed.

See also

[edit]
  • Allonge – slip of paper attached to a cheque used to endorse it when there is not enough space.
  • Blank cheque – cheque where amount has been left blank.
  • Certified cheque – guaranteed by a bank.
  • E-cheque – electronic fund transfer.
  • Hundi – historic Indian cheque-like instrument.
  • Labour cheque – political concept to distribute goods in exchange for work.
  • Negotiable cow – urban legend where a cow was used as a cheque.
  • Substitute cheque – the act of scanning paper cheques and turning them into electronic payments.
  • Transit check – a cheque which is drawn on another bank than that at which it is presented for payment.
  • Traveller's cheque – a pre-paid cheque that could be used to make payments in stores.
  • Railway pay cheque – identification used to collect railway workers' pay packets.
  • Warrant of payment

Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
A cheque is a negotiable financial instrument defined under law as a bill of exchange drawn on a specified banker and payable on demand, instructing the bank to transfer a specified sum of money from the drawer's account to the named payee or bearer. Spelled 'cheque' in British English and 'check' in American English, this written order, typically printed on paper and including details such as the date, amount in figures and words, payee's name, and the drawer's signature, serves as a secure method for payments without the need to carry cash. Cheques originated in ancient banking practices but evolved into their modern form in 13th-century Venice as a tool for facilitating international trade by allowing merchants to transfer funds without transporting physical money. The use of cheques expanded significantly in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries, with the first pre-printed cheque forms appearing in England in the 1750s from private banks like Vere, Glyn & Hallifax. By the 19th century, cheques became standardized under legal frameworks such as the UK's Bills of Exchange Act 1882, which codified their negotiability and protections for parties involved. Key features include the drawer's authorization for payment, the drawee bank's role in honoring or dishonoring the instrument, and the payee's right to endorse and deposit or cash it. Cheques should generally be presented within six months in the UK, after which they are considered 'stale' and banks may refuse to honor them without further instruction from the drawer. Various types of cheques exist to suit different transaction needs, enhancing security and specificity. A bearer cheque is payable to the holder without endorsement, while an order cheque requires the payee's name and endorsement for payment. Crossed cheques, marked with two parallel lines, can only be deposited into a bank account and not cashed over the counter, reducing fraud risk. Other variants include post-dated cheques, which are invalid until the specified future date, and certified cheques, guaranteed by the bank with funds set aside upon issuance. Despite their historical prominence, cheque usage has declined sharply in recent decades due to the rise of digital alternatives like electronic transfers and cards, with UK volumes around 20 million in the first half of 2025, continuing to decline from previous years. In the UK, cheques remain relevant for certain payments such as to charities, landlords, and small businesses, but overall, they account for less than 1% of non-cash transactions as faster, more convenient options dominate. Regulatory efforts, including the Cheques Act 1957, continue to protect users by treating paid cheques as receipt evidence and limiting banker liability for losses.

Fundamentals

Nature and Definition

A cheque is a bill of exchange drawn on a banker and payable on demand. In essence, it constitutes an unconditional order in writing, addressed by the drawer to the bank, signed by the drawer, and directing the payment of a certain sum of money to the specified payee or to the bearer. This instrument facilitates the transfer of funds from the drawer's account without the physical exchange of cash, serving as a directive for the bank to debit the drawer's balance upon proper presentment. Legally, a cheque qualifies as a negotiable instrument in common law jurisdictions under statutes such as the United Kingdom's Bills of Exchange Act 1882, which governs its form, transfer, and enforcement. Its key characteristics include being an unconditional order to pay, drawn specifically on a banking institution, payable exclusively on demand rather than at a future date, and transferable by means of endorsement completed by delivery. These attributes ensure the cheque's fluidity in commercial transactions, allowing holders to negotiate it freely while maintaining the drawer's liability until payment or dishonor; issuance of a cheque constitutes conditional payment for any underlying debt or obligation, which remains unsatisfied until the cheque is honored or cleared by the payee's bank, as per principles in statutes such as the Uniform Commercial Code § 3-310. A cheque differs from a promissory note, which involves a direct and unconditional promise by the maker to pay the payee, without requiring an intermediary party. In contrast to a general bill of exchange, which may be payable at a fixed future time and drawn on any person or entity, a cheque is invariably payable on demand and addressed solely to a banker as the drawee. The basic mechanics of a cheque involve its negotiation through endorsement, whereby the payee signs the reverse to transfer rights to another holder, enabling successive transfers until presentment. Upon receipt, the holder presents the cheque to the drawee bank for payment, which must occur within a reasonable time to hold the drawer accountable; failure to present promptly may discharge the drawer's obligation. This process underscores the cheque's role as a demand-based payment mechanism reliant on timely action for enforceability.

Etymology and Spelling

The term "cheque" derives from the Old French word eschequier, meaning a check in the game of chess, which itself traces back to the Arabic shāh (king) via Persian influences, denoting a position of control or restraint. In the banking context, this evolved in 18th-century English slang to refer to a counterfoil or stub used by goldsmith-bankers in London to verify transactions, symbolizing a "check" against forgery or error. The financial sense of a written order for money drawn on a bank first appeared around 1798, distinguishing it from earlier instruments like the bill of exchange, which was a broader merchant tool for deferred payments across locations, whereas the cheque became a demand-draft payable immediately to a banker. The spelling "cheque" emerged as a variant influenced by the French chèque and the English exchequer (a treasury term also rooted in chess), gaining traction in British banking terminology around 1828, as noted in James William Gilbart's Practical Treatise on Banking. By the early 19th century, "cheque" was standardized in the United Kingdom and Commonwealth countries for the financial instrument, while "check" persisted as the original and general English form, particularly in American English where it was used from the late 18th century onward in early banking practices. In the United States, "check" became the dominant spelling by the 19th century, reflecting simpler orthographic preferences and avoiding confusion with the verb or noun senses of "check." Pronunciation of "cheque" aligns closely across variants, typically as /tʃɛk/ in both British and American English, emphasizing the shared phonetic roots from chess terminology. Globally, the term has been adapted into non-English languages with minor phonetic shifts, such as French chèque (/ʃɛk/), Spanish cheque (/ˈtʃe.ke/), and German Scheck (/ʃɛk/), often retaining the banking connotation while incorporating local linguistic conventions.

History

Early Origins

The precursors to modern cheques can be traced to ancient payment systems, where written orders facilitated transfers without physical currency. In Mesopotamia around 2000 BCE, merchants and temple officials used inscribed clay tablets as promissory notes to record promises of payment, enabling trade across distances by authorizing future delivery of goods or silver equivalents. These tablets served as early drafts, documenting debts and credits in cuneiform script, though they lacked the negotiability of later instruments. In the Roman Empire from the 3rd century BCE to the 3rd century CE, bankers known as argentarii operated deposit accounts and issued perscriptio—written payment orders directing funds from a depositor's account to a third party, functioning as primitive cheques. These orders were recorded in account books (codices) for legal verification, allowing secure transactions in bustling forums without carrying coinage, and were redeemable in cash or credited to another account. Earlier influences appeared in Ptolemaic Egypt during the 1st century BCE, where papyrus fragments from mummy cartonnage document non-transferable payment orders to bankers, typically for small copper amounts, presented in person or via agents. Medieval Europe built on these foundations through Italian banking innovations in the 13th century, when merchants in Genoa, Florence, and Venice developed letters of credit and bills of exchange to finance international trade. These instruments allowed a trader in one city to draw funds from a correspondent banker in another, using written orders payable to a named beneficiary or bearer, often with interest disguised as exchange rate differences to evade usury bans. By the early 14th century, such bills circulated widely across Europe, transferable by endorsement, providing a safer alternative to transporting specie for cross-border commerce. The modern cheque emerged in 17th-century England amid the growth of deposit banking by London goldsmiths, who accepted gold deposits and issued receipts transferable by written order. The earliest surviving English cheque dates to February 16, 1659, a handwritten order for £400 drawn by Nicholas Vanacker on the goldsmith-bankers Morris and Clayton, payable to Mr. Delboe. Goldsmiths like Morris and Clayton formalized these as account transfers, establishing mutual acceptance among at least 17 bankers by the 1660s, which enabled informal clearing. The founding of the Bank of England in 1694, which issued redeemable promissory notes, further standardized paper-based payments and influenced cheque practices by promoting reliable drawn instruments over cash. By the 18th century, cheques gained traction in England as banknotes faced issuance restrictions, doubling the number of London banks between 1760 and 1800. Goldsmith-banker Lawrence Childs of Child & Co. introduced the first printed cheques with serial numbers in 1762, enhancing security and trackability over handwritten orders. Around 1770, informal daily exchanges of cheques began among London bank clerks at taverns like the Six Bells, evolving into the London Clearing House by 1773 for efficient settlement. Legal recognition solidified through common law, treating cheques as assignable bills of exchange; for instance, the 1758 case Miller v. Race affirmed the negotiability of similar instruments, extending protections to cheques by the late 18th century.

Modern Development

The widespread adoption of cheques accelerated in the 19th century following the Industrial Revolution, as expanding commerce in Europe and the United States necessitated more efficient payment mechanisms beyond cash and bills of exchange. In Britain, the London Clearing House, initially formed in 1773 by thirty-one banks to facilitate cheque settlements, saw its operations formalize and expand significantly during this period to handle the growing volume of transactions among member institutions. Similarly, in the United States, the New York Clearing House Association was established in 1853 to streamline interbank cheque clearing, marking a key step toward organized payment processing amid rapid economic growth. During the 20th century, cheque usage standardized globally, particularly through technological innovations and the influence of colonial banking networks established by European powers. The introduction of Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) encoding in the mid-1950s, developed by the American Bankers Association in collaboration with institutions like the Stanford Research Institute, enabled automated machine-readable processing of cheques, drastically reducing manual handling errors and speeds. This advancement facilitated the first widespread computerized cheque processing in the 1960s, with systems like IBM's 1210 reader-sorter allowing banks to sort thousands of items per hour via magnetic reading. Concurrently, British and other European colonial banking systems spread cheque practices to regions such as India, Africa, and Australia, embedding the instrument in post-colonial financial infrastructures that persisted into independence eras. In the post-2000 era, the shift toward digital integration transformed cheque handling, with electronic imaging emerging as a pivotal development. The U.S. Check 21 Act, enacted in 2003 and effective from October 2004, authorized the creation and exchange of digital "substitute checks" as legal equivalents to paper originals, enabling banks to truncate physical cheques and process images electronically for faster clearing. This legislation integrated cheques with online banking platforms, allowing remote deposit capture via mobile apps and scanners, thereby extending their utility in a digitizing economy. Globally, similar electronic truncation systems proliferated, supporting hybrid paper-digital workflows. By the 2010s and into 2025, regulatory and technological advancements further diminished cheque reliance, favoring real-time electronic alternatives. The European Union's Payment Services Directive 2 (PSD2), implemented in 2018, promoted open banking and secure digital payments, indirectly curbing cheque volumes by mandating stronger authentication for electronic transactions and fostering competition from fintech innovations. In the U.S., cheque issuance declined sharply from approximately 18 billion in 2000 to under 5 billion by 2023, driven by the adoption of real-time payment networks like The Clearing House's RTP (launched 2017) and the Federal Reserve's FedNow (2023), which offer instant settlement and have seen volumes surge over 60% year-over-year by mid-2025. A 2025 U.S. executive order accelerated this trend by directing federal agencies to phase out paper cheques for electronic disbursements, underscoring cheques' evolving role amid broader payment modernization.

Components

Core Elements

A standard cheque, as a negotiable instrument, must include several mandatory fields to ensure its validity and processability. These essential elements are the date of issue, which specifies when the payment is to be made on demand; the name of the payee, indicating the intended recipient; the amount, expressed both in numeric form (e.g., $100.00) and in written words (e.g., one hundred dollars) to prevent discrepancies; the drawer's signature, authenticating the order to pay; and bank details, such as the routing number, account number, and cheque number, typically encoded in the Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) line at the bottom in countries like the United States; other jurisdictions use equivalent printed details like sort codes. The structural layout of a cheque is designed for clarity and security, with the front side featuring pre-printed fields for the mandatory information, including space for the drawer's name and address, while the reverse side is reserved for endorsements. Standard sizes vary by region but adhere to established norms; in the United States, personal cheques measure approximately 6 inches by 2.75 inches, ensuring compatibility with processing equipment. In the United Kingdom, cheques conform to the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company (C&CCC) Standard 3 for layout and font. Integral to the core design are basic security features that protect against forgery and alteration, such as watermarks—subtle images visible when held to light—microprinting in fine lines (e.g., along the signature area) that blurs when photocopied, and heat-sensitive or chemical-reactive inks that reveal warnings like "VOID" if tampered with. These elements are standardized to maintain integrity during handling. For legal validity, a cheque must be an unconditional order to pay a fixed sum, properly signed by the drawer, and dated, with presentation required within a reasonable time—often six months in jurisdictions such as the UK and US—to avoid becoming stale-dated and potentially dishonored. Field placement for these core elements can vary by region, with differences in the positioning of the date, amount boxes, or bank details to align with local banking practices.

Supplementary Features

Endorsements on cheques serve as supplementary mechanisms to facilitate or restrict the transfer of payment rights, enhancing security and control beyond the core issuance. A blank endorsement occurs when the payee simply signs their name on the back of the cheque, converting it into a bearer instrument payable to any holder, which simplifies transfer but increases theft risk. In contrast, a special endorsement involves the payee signing and adding "pay to the order of [specific name]," directing payment to a designated transferee and allowing further negotiation. Restrictive endorsements limit usage, such as by inscribing "for deposit only" or "pay to [name] account no. [number]," preventing cashing and mandating deposit into a specified account to mitigate fraud during handling. Attached documents complement cheques by aiding record-keeping and transaction tracking without impacting the instrument's validity. Counterfoils, the detachable stubs in chequebooks, record essential details like date, payee, and amount alongside the issuer's signature, providing a duplicate for accounting purposes. Deposit slips accompany cheques during banking submission, itemizing cash and cheque deposits with account details to streamline crediting and reconciliation. Memos or supporting notes, often clipped or referenced, document the transaction's purpose, such as invoice numbers, ensuring audit trails while remaining separate from the cheque body. Optional fields on cheques offer flexibility for additional instructions or notations. In some countries, such as the US, the memo line, typically at the bottom, allows issuers to note the payment's intent, like "rent for November," aiding bookkeeping without legal enforceability; UK cheques generally lack this field. A "not negotiable" clause, added by crossing the cheque and writing these words, restricts transferability, meaning any holder acquires no better title than the endorser, though the cheque remains payable to the named payee. Regional differences include standard crossing with two parallel lines in Commonwealth countries to mandate bank deposit. Post-dated instructions involve entering a future date, instructing banks not to honor the cheque until that time, which supports deferred payments but does not guarantee funds availability. Non-core security add-ons incorporate advanced materials to deter counterfeiting and alterations. Holograms, embedded foil patches, display shifting images under light, verifying authenticity during inspection. UV inks produce invisible fluorescent patterns or fibers visible only under ultraviolet light, resisting reproduction by standard scanners. Pantograph patterns, fine background prints, reveal words like "void" or "copy" when photocopied, as the design exploits copier resolution limits to expose duplicates. In processing, attachments and endorsements accompany the cheque through clearing without altering its core validity, as banks verify endorsements for authorization while treating supplementary items like counterfoils or deposit slips as ancillary for routing and recordation. For instance, restrictive endorsements guide deposit-only handling, but the cheque's payability remains intact if properly executed, with attachments scanned separately in electronic systems to maintain transaction integrity.

Standard Processes

Issuing and Negotiating

Issuing a cheque begins with the drawer, the individual or entity authorizing the payment, carefully completing the instrument's fields to ensure accuracy and prevent disputes. The process starts by entering the current date in the designated space, typically in day-month-year format to avoid ambiguity, followed by the payee's full name or business designation in the "pay to the order of" line. The amount is then specified twice—first in numeric form (e.g., £100.00) in the box provided, and then in words (e.g., "one hundred pounds only") on the line below to guard against alterations. A brief memo or reference number may be added for record-keeping, though it is optional. Finally, the drawer signs the cheque in the signature line at the bottom right, which serves as legal authorization for the drawee—the drawer's bank—to release the funds upon presentment. For standard cheques, issuing the instrument does not cause the drawee bank to reserve or hold funds in the drawer's account; the funds remain fully available to the drawer until the cheque is presented by the payee, processed through clearing and settlement, and the paying bank verifies sufficient funds before debiting the account. Alterations, such as crossing out or overwriting entries, should be avoided, as they can invalidate the cheque or lead to rejection by the bank. Once issued, the cheque enters the negotiation phase, where it is transferred from the drawer to the payee through simple delivery if made payable to a specific bearer, or via endorsement if it is an order instrument naming a particular payee. The payee, the intended recipient of the funds, receives the cheque and may negotiate it by endorsing the reverse side with their signature, often including "for deposit only" followed by their account details to restrict further transfer and enhance security. This endorsement transfers the right to receive payment to the payee's bank or another holder. The payee then presents the endorsed cheque to their bank for deposit into their account or, less commonly, for cash if the cheque is uncrossed and the bank permits it. Presentment occurs when the payee's bank submits the cheque to the drawer's bank for validation and payment authorization. Throughout this chain, the drawer initiates the transaction, the drawee verifies sufficient funds and authenticity, and the payee facilitates the transfer. Common practices during issuance and negotiation include crossing the cheque to limit its handling. A crossed cheque features two parallel transverse lines drawn across the top left corner, indicating it must be deposited into a bank account rather than cashed over the counter. Adding the words "account payee only" between the lines further restricts negotiation, ensuring funds are credited solely to the named payee's account and reducing theft risks. Additionally, the drawer may issue a stop-payment order to the drawee bank if the cheque is lost, stolen, or issued in error, provided it has not yet been presented; this involves providing the cheque number, date, payee, and amount, typically via phone or online, followed by written confirmation, and incurs a fee. Such orders remain effective for six months unless renewed. The timeline for negotiation is constrained by the cheque's validity period, after which it becomes stale-dated and may not be honored. In standard practice, cheques remain valid for six months from the issue date, meaning the payee must present it within this window to avoid requiring a replacement from the drawer. Banks may still process older cheques at their discretion, but presentment beyond this period often results in refusal to protect against outdated transactions.

Clearing and Settlement

The clearing process for cheques involves the transfer of the instrument from the collecting bank to the paying bank for verification and payment, typically through interbank networks to ensure efficient routing and reduce physical handling. Upon receipt from the payee, the collecting bank presents the cheque to the paying bank, either directly or via a clearing house, where the paying bank verifies the drawer's account balance and authenticity before authorizing payment. If sufficient funds are available, the paying bank debits the amount from the drawer's account. In the United States, this is often facilitated by the Federal Reserve Banks, which process forward and return cheques, crediting the collecting institution while debiting the paying bank. In the United Kingdom, the Cheque and Credit Clearing Company (now part of Pay.UK) manages the process through the Image Clearing System, where digital images of cheques are exchanged among member banks. Settlement follows successful clearing and entails the actual transfer of funds between banks to finalize the transaction, often on a net basis to minimize liquidity needs. In the US, most cheques settle within one business day via the Federal Reserve's services, with electronic presentment enabling rapid interbank debits and credits. In the UK, under the Image Clearing System, cheques paid in on a weekday before the cut-off time typically have funds available to the payee by 23:59 the next working day, with the paying bank required to decide on payment or return by the end of that day, providing settlement finality within one to two working days. This timeline ensures that payees gain access to funds promptly while allowing paying banks time for verification. Lock box services provide businesses with a centralized mechanism to accelerate cheque receipt and deposit, particularly for high-volume receivables. Under this system, customers mail payments to a dedicated post office box maintained by a financial institution, which retrieves, scans, and processes the cheques daily, depositing funds into the business's account and transmitting remittance data for accounts receivable updates. Wholesale lock boxes handle fewer, higher-value items like corporate payments, while retail versions manage numerous low-value cheques, such as utility bills, often converting them to electronic formats for faster clearance. Technological aids enhance efficiency in cheque sorting and exchange, minimizing manual intervention. Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) technology encodes routing, account, and cheque numbers at the bottom of the instrument using magnetic ink, allowing automated readers to sort and route items accurately during processing. In the US, the Check 21 Act enables electronic image exchange, where scanned cheque images are transmitted instead of physical documents, with nearly all interbank checks presented electronically; similar image-based systems in the UK further streamline the clearing cycle. Banks typically impose fees for cheque clearing services to cover processing costs, while regulations govern funds availability to protect consumers. In the US, under Regulation CC (Expedited Funds Availability Act), banks must make the first $275 of local checks available the next business day, with full amounts for government and cashier's checks available immediately, though institutions may charge deposit fees ranging from $0 to $15 per item depending on account type. In the UK, clearing is generally fee-free for standard personal cheques, but businesses may incur charges of £1-£5 for lock box or bulk processing, with funds credited by the next business day under the Image Clearing System. Holds can extend up to two days for non-local cheques under Reg CC, ensuring banks have time to verify and mitigate risks.

Variations

Secured and Guaranteed Types

Secured and guaranteed types of cheques provide enhanced assurance of payment by involving direct bank involvement, distinguishing them from ordinary personal cheques. In ordinary personal cheques, banks do not reserve or hold funds when the cheque is written; the funds remain available in the drawer's account until the cheque is deposited or cashed by the recipient, presented to the drawer's bank, and cleared, at which point the bank debits the amount from the account (if sufficient funds are available). In contrast, secured and guaranteed types involve mechanisms such as fund reservation or bank liability. These variants are designed to mitigate risks associated with insufficient funds or non-payment, offering payees greater confidence in receiving the specified amount. A cashier's cheque, also known as a bank cheque, is issued by a bank or credit union using its own funds rather than those of the account holder, making it prepaid and irrevocable once issued. The drawer provides the bank with the full amount in advance, and the bank acts as both the drawer and drawee, guaranteeing payment regardless of the drawer's subsequent financial status. This form is particularly secure because the funds are withdrawn from the bank's reserves at issuance, eliminating the possibility of the cheque bouncing due to the drawer's insolvency. Certified cheques involve the issuing bank verifying the drawer's account balance and reserving the exact amount at the time of issuance, after which the cheque is stamped or marked as certified to confirm the funds' availability. Unlike a standard cheque, the bank assumes responsibility for payment by setting aside the funds, though the cheque remains drawn on the drawer's account; this reservation prevents the drawer from accessing those funds until the cheque clears. The process typically requires the drawer's presence or authorization, and the certification serves as the bank's guarantee to the payee. Bank drafts, sometimes referred to as banker's drafts, are similar to cashier's cheques but are drawn by one bank on another financial institution, often used for transfers between different banks to ensure secure remittance. The payer instructs their bank to issue the draft, which debits the payer's account and credits the issuing bank's reserve; the receiving bank then honors it upon presentation. This type is non-revocable and backed by the issuing bank's guarantee, providing a reliable method for payments where the parties may not share the same financial institution. Teller's cheques function as a variant of cashier's or bank drafts, typically issued by a bank teller and drawn on another depository institution, often to accommodate non-account holders seeking a guaranteed payment instrument. They are prepaid by the purchaser and carry the issuing bank's assurance of funds, similar to a cashier's cheque, but emphasize accessibility for individuals without an established account relationship. Under U.S. law, for instance, a teller's cheque is defined as any cheque issued by one depository institution and drawn on another. These secured and guaranteed cheques are commonly employed in scenarios requiring high trust and minimal risk, such as real estate purchases where buyers provide deposits or closing payments, or international transactions to facilitate cross-border transfers without the vulnerabilities of personal cheques. In real estate deals, for example, a bank draft or cashier's cheque ensures the seller receives guaranteed funds promptly upon settlement. They are also favored for large-scale business payments or escrow arrangements, where standard endorsement processes may apply but the guarantee overrides concerns about the drawer's reliability.

Specialized Forms

Payroll cheques, also known as payroll checks, are specialized payment instruments issued by employers to compensate employees for wages and salaries. These cheques typically include or are accompanied by a detachable pay stub that itemizes gross earnings, deductions such as taxes and benefits, net pay, and year-to-date totals, ensuring transparency and compliance with labor regulations. In jurisdictions like California, employers are required by law to provide accurate itemized wage statements with each paycheck to verify hours worked, rates, and withholdings, helping employees track their compensation and facilitating audits. This format supports adherence to federal and state labor laws, such as the Fair Labor Standards Act, by documenting payroll details without mandating stubs in all cases but emphasizing clear record-keeping. Traveller's cheques were a prepaid form of payment designed for international travel, allowing users to exchange them for currency or goods at banks and merchants worldwide. Introduced by American Express in 1891, these instruments featured a counter-signature system for security, making them refundable if lost or stolen upon verification, which protected travelers from financial loss. Issued by financial firms like American Express, they functioned as a safe alternative to carrying cash, with the issuer guaranteeing redemption after confirming the traveler's identity. However, major issuers discontinued new traveller's cheques as of 2021, though existing ones remain valid and redeemable indefinitely. Warrants are government-issued instruments used for disbursing public funds, functioning similarly to cheques by directing payment from a treasury account to a specified recipient. Unlike standard cheques, warrants carry explicit fiscal authority derived from legislative appropriations, serving as evidence of approved funding for government programs and expenditures. For instance, state treasuries issue warrants as negotiable orders payable from dedicated funds, ensuring controlled release of public monies for obligations like vendor payments or employee salaries. They are drawn against governmental treasuries rather than commercial banks, emphasizing their role in official fiscal operations. Money orders and postal orders serve as fixed-fee, prepaid payment alternatives to cheques, particularly for secure remittances where the sender prepays the amount plus a nominal issuance fee. These instruments are typically non-negotiable, made payable to a specific recipient without endorsement capabilities, reducing fraud risk and making them suitable for mailing funds domestically or internationally. Issued by postal services or financial institutions, they provide a reliable method for transfers, with the issuer guaranteeing payment upon presentation by the named payee. Oversized cheques are novelty items designed for ceremonial purposes, such as presenting awards or prizes in publicity events, and are not intended for actual financial transactions. Commonly used in lotteries, fundraisers, and corporate announcements, these large-format replicas—often measuring 16 by 32 inches—feature exaggerated designs for visual impact during photo opportunities but lack the legal backing for deposit or clearance. They serve promotional roles, like displaying jackpot winnings symbolically before issuing standard payments, enhancing media coverage without serving as functional instruments. Payment vouchers are internal accounting documents used by businesses to authorize and record disbursements, resembling cheques in format but confined to organizational use for tracking liabilities and expenses. These prenumbered forms detail the payee, amount, purpose, and supporting invoices, streamlining accounts payable processes and bolstering internal controls against unauthorized payments. By mimicking cheque structures, vouchers facilitate approval workflows, ensuring all expenditures are documented and auditable before actual funds are released via checks or electronic transfers.

Global Usage

English-Speaking Countries

In English-speaking countries, particularly those with common law traditions such as the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, cheques function as negotiable instruments governed by statutes derived from the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, emphasizing transferability through endorsement and delivery. These jurisdictions share rules on endorsement, where the payee typically endorses the back to transfer ownership, and a shift toward electronic funds transfer (EFT) systems has reduced reliance on physical cheques while maintaining legal frameworks for their use. Negotiability allows cheques to be treated as unconditional orders to pay, subject to drawer funds availability, with protections for holders in due course. In the United Kingdom, cheques are regulated under the Bills of Exchange Act 1882, which defines them as bills of exchange drawn on a banker payable on demand, with crossed cheques—marked by two parallel lines—being the standard to ensure deposit into a bank account rather than cash withdrawal. This crossing, often with "account payee only," restricts transferability for added security. Cheques remain valid for six months from the date of issue, after which banks may refuse payment as stale-dated. By 2024, cheque volumes had fallen to 91 million, representing just 0.2% of total payments, largely supplanted by the Faster Payments Service introduced in 2008 for near-instant transfers. As of Q1 2025, quarterly volumes were 20.4 million. The United States operates under Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Articles 3 and 4, which classify cheques as negotiable instruments and outline bank deposit and collection processes, respectively, with federal overlay from the Check 21 Act of 2003 enabling electronic imaging and truncation for faster clearing. The Magnetic Ink Character Recognition (MICR) line, printed in magnetic ink at the cheque's bottom, is required for automated processing, encoding routing, account, and serial numbers. Cheques are generally considered stale after six months, though banks are not obligated to pay them. Post-dated cheques, written for future dates, are enforceable but vary by state; for instance, some states like California allow early payment unless notified, while others protect against it. Canada's system mirrors the U.S. in many respects, drawing from the federal Bills of Exchange Act and provincial adaptations, with cheque imaging becoming widespread since 2018 when over 70% of interbank cheques were exchanged as digital images under Payments Canada rules, accelerating clearance to two days. Cheques are valid for six months, treated as stale-dated thereafter unless certified. Endorsement rules align with common law principles, allowing special or blank endorsements for transfer. In Australia and New Zealand, the Electronic Transactions Acts (1999 and 2002, respectively) facilitate digital alternatives while upholding cheque negotiability under bills of exchange legislation. Australian cheques are typically crossed by default to mandate bank deposit, with usage plummeting nearly 90% over the past decade to under 1% of non-cash payments by 2023, prompting a government plan to phase out the system by 2030, with a transition plan released in November 2024 supporting users through the change; government use ends by 2028. New Zealand has seen similar declines, with cheque volumes dropping over 50% since 2016 and comprising less than 1% of transactions by 2019, as banks like ANZ ceased issuing cheque books in 2021; crossed cheques are standard, and validity is generally six months. Both countries emphasize EFT via systems like Australia's New Payments Platform for real-time transfers.

Other Jurisdictions

In India, cheques are governed by the Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, which defines them as bills of exchange drawn on a specified banker and payable on demand. Despite the rise of digital payments, cheques maintain notable usage in rural areas, where digital infrastructure may be limited and traditional methods persist for transactions like agricultural payments and small business dealings. Under Section 138 of the Act, the dishonour of a cheque due to insufficient funds constitutes a criminal offence, punishable by imprisonment for up to two years, a fine up to twice the cheque amount, or both. Cheques in India have a validity period of three months from the date of issue, as stipulated by Reserve Bank of India guidelines, after which they cannot be presented for payment. In Japan, cheques are regulated under the Bill of Exchange Act of 1932 and the related Cheque Act, which outline their form, endorsement, and payment processes as negotiable instruments payable on demand. Usage has become rare since the 2010s, overshadowed by the rapid adoption of electronic payments, with the cashless transaction ratio rising from 13% in 2010 to 42.8% by 2024, driven by government initiatives and mobile banking. Banks and regulations emphasize electronic transfers for efficiency, while strict penalties under the Penal Code address forgery, treating alterations or counterfeit cheques as criminal fraud punishable by imprisonment up to ten years depending on the amount involved. Israel's cheque system operates under the Banks Law, 5741-1981, which empowers the Bank of Israel to supervise banking operations and payment instruments, including provisions for clearing and settlement. Cheques are typically crossed with two parallel lines to ensure deposit-only processing, a standard practice that enhances security and aligns with anti-fraud measures, though not explicitly mandated in statute but enforced through banking protocols. Their use is declining amid the growth of real-time gross settlement systems like ZAHAV, which facilitate instant electronic transfers and have reduced reliance on paper-based instruments. In Turkey, cheques are regulated through the Turkish Commercial Code (Article 780 onward) and the dedicated Cheque Law No. 5941 of 2009, which detail issuance, endorsement, and liability as key instruments in commercial transactions. They remain common among businesses for deferred payments and trade settlements, serving as a trusted alternative where credit access is constrained. The 2009 law initially imposed imprisonment for up to one year for dishonoured cheques due to insufficient funds, but amendments shifted to judicial fines equivalent to at least the cheque amount plus interest, with potential bans on future issuance. Across these jurisdictions, cheque validity periods vary—typically three months in India, up to six months in Turkey—while enforcement mechanisms emphasize civil recovery with criminal elements in cases of intent, such as India's Section 138 penalties for wilful default.

Decline and Alternatives

Factors Driving Decline

The decline in cheque usage worldwide stems primarily from the rapid adoption of digital payment technologies, which offer faster, more convenient alternatives to traditional paper-based methods. Since the 1990s, cheque volumes in many developed economies have fallen by more than 50%, driven by the proliferation of electronic systems that bypass the need for physical instruments. This shift reflects broader technological advancements that have rendered cheques obsolete for most everyday transactions. A key driver is the rise of electronic funds transfer (EFT) systems, which enable seamless digital movement of money without paper intermediaries. Introduced widely in the late 20th century, EFT has revolutionized payments by allowing instant account-to-account transfers, significantly reducing reliance on cheques for both personal and business use. Complementing this, mobile payment apps and real-time payment networks, such as the RTP network launched in the United States in 2017, provide near-instantaneous settlement, further accelerating the move away from cheques. These innovations have made digital options ubiquitous, with cashless payments surging globally and correlating directly with cheque reductions across 20 countries from 2012 to 2021. Cost inefficiencies also play a substantial role, as processing cheques incurs significantly higher expenses than digital equivalents. Issuing and clearing a single cheque can cost between $4 and $20, including printing, mailing, and manual handling, whereas electronic transfers often cost mere cents and occur instantaneously. Banks and businesses increasingly impose fees on cheque usage to discourage it, amplifying the economic incentive to switch to automated digital methods that streamline operations and reduce administrative burdens. This disparity in processing efficiency has led to a marked drop in cheque adoption, particularly in high-volume commercial settings where cumulative savings from digital alternatives are substantial. Security vulnerabilities inherent to cheques exacerbate their decline, as they lack the robust encryption and real-time monitoring of digital platforms. Paper cheques are prone to interception, alteration, or forgery during transit, making them easier targets for fraud compared to encrypted EFT and app-based systems that employ multi-layered protections. Despite perceptions among some users that cheques are safer, data shows digital methods offer superior fraud detection through automated verification, prompting a broader migration away from vulnerable paper formats. This concern has intensified with rising incidences of cheque-related scams, further eroding trust in the instrument. Demographic shifts, particularly among younger cohorts, reinforce this trend, as digital natives overwhelmingly favor card and app-based payments over outdated cheque systems. Generations Z and millennials, who prioritize speed and accessibility, report minimal to no use of cheques, with over 80% of young adults relying on mobile wallets for transactions. Surveys indicate that Gen Z leads in adopting digital methods, viewing cheques as cumbersome and irrelevant, which sustains the long-term volume decline observed since the 1990s. As these groups enter the workforce and dominate consumer spending, their preferences accelerate the obsolescence of cheques across generations. Environmental considerations provide an additional impetus, with initiatives aimed at reducing paper consumption highlighting the ecological toll of cheque production and processing. Each cheque requires paper resources, ink, and transportation, contributing to deforestation and carbon emissions, whereas digital alternatives eliminate these impacts entirely. Financial institutions have actively promoted paperless transitions, achieving reductions like an 8.5% drop in cheque processing volumes through sustainability-driven policies. The advent of electronic imaging standards, such as Check 21 in the US, has further minimized physical handling, yielding millions of tons in avoided emissions and aligning with global paper reduction goals.

Regional Patterns

In North America, cheque usage has experienced a sharp decline over the past two decades, driven by the adoption of electronic alternatives and regulatory incentives for digital migration. In the United States, commercial cheque volumes collected through the Federal Reserve fell from 17 billion in 2000 to approximately 3 billion in 2024, representing an 82.5% reduction, with the shift accelerated by policies from the National Automated Clearing House Association (NACHA) promoting ACH transfers over paper instruments. In Canada, cheque volumes dropped from 950 million in 2014 to 379 million in 2023, a 60% decrease, partly mitigated post-2010 by the introduction of cheque imaging that enabled faster electronic processing but ultimately failed to reverse the broader trend toward digital payments. Europe has seen even steeper reductions in cheque reliance, with widespread implementation of faster clearing systems contributing to the downturn. In the United Kingdom, cheque volumes declined from 848 million in 2012 to 150 million in 2021, continuing a long-term fall from around 1.2 billion in 2000, and reached just 0.2% of all payments by 2024 following the rollout of the Image Cheque Clearing system in 2017, which reduced processing times to one day. Across the European Union, overall cheque volumes decreased from 5 billion in 2010 to 1.02 billion in 2023, accounting for less than 1% of non-cash transactions by 2024, with countries like Germany and Belgium approaching zero usage while France retained a higher but diminishing share. In Asia, cheque adoption varies but is uniformly waning amid rapid digital infrastructure growth. India, where cheques accounted for 0.2% of all transaction volumes in the first half of 2025 (down from higher shares pre-UPI launch), continues to see accelerated decline as Unified Payments Interface (UPI) transactions surged to 85% of volumes, totaling over 10,600 crore payments worth Rs 143.3 lakh crore in the same period. Japan has maintained near-zero cheque usage since the early 2000s, with volumes dropping from 77 million in 2012 to 36 million in 2021 and representing negligible share of cashless payments by capita at 0.29 checks per person. Oceania reflects a near-complete transition away from cheques, supported by real-time payment innovations. In Australia, annual cheque volumes fell below 50 million by 2023, with 27 million processed in 2022 alone marking a 90% reduction over the prior decade and less than 0.1% of retail payments, increasingly replaced by PayID-linked digital transfers. New Zealand completed its cheque phaseout in 2021 after a 10% annual decline since 2004, with pre-closure per capita usage at 0.14—higher than Australia's current level but now fully supplanted by electronic systems. Comparatively, from 2012 to 2021, cheque volumes declined at compound annual rates of 6.7% in the US, 8.8% in Canada, 15.9% in the UK, and up to 17.4% in Germany, with policy drivers like NACHA's ACH mandates in North America and image-based clearing in Europe accelerating the global shift, resulting in cheques comprising under 5% of transactions across these regions by 2025.

Modern Substitutes

Electronic funds transfers (EFTs) have emerged as a primary substitute for traditional cheques, offering faster and more efficient payment processing. In the United States, the Automated Clearing House (ACH) network facilitates batch-processed transfers that are typically low-cost and suitable for recurring or bulk payments, though they may take 1-3 business days to settle. Wire transfers, by contrast, provide near-immediate settlement—often within hours—for urgent domestic or international transactions, albeit at higher fees ranging from $15 to $50 per transfer. In Europe, the Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA) enables seamless cross-border EFTs with standardized speed and low costs, supporting instant transfers in many cases to enhance efficiency over paper-based methods. Digital wallets and mobile payment apps represent another significant shift away from cheques, enabling instant peer-to-peer and merchant transactions via smartphones. Platforms like PayPal, Venmo, and Alipay allow users to link bank accounts or cards for seamless transfers without physical instruments; as of 2025, global digital wallet adoption reached approximately 4.5 billion users. In the US, PayPal holds a 36% market share among digital wallets, followed by Venmo at 16%, driving a reduction in cheque usage for personal and small business payments. Card-based payments, particularly debit and credit cards, have largely supplanted personal cheques at point-of-sale (POS) locations by providing quick, secure transactions. The widespread acceptance of debit cards for direct account debits has accelerated the decline of consumer cheque writing at retail, as electronic processing reduces handling time and fraud risks associated with paper. Credit cards further diminish cheque reliance by offering rewards and protections, with POS adoption contributing to over 60% of global e-commerce transactions via digital methods in 2025. Real-time payment systems have further eroded cheque usage by enabling instantaneous transfers 24/7. In India, the Unified Payments Interface (UPI) processed approximately 18 billion transactions per month on average in the first half of 2025, accounting for nearly all digital payment volume and surpassing traditional methods like cheques in speed and accessibility. Similarly, the UK's Faster Payments Service (FPS) supports real-time account-to-account transfers, modernizing infrastructure to handle increasing cashless volumes and reducing reliance on slower cheque clearing. Hybrid alternatives bridge traditional and digital cheque systems through electronic imaging and truncation. The US Check 21 Act of 2003 authorizes "substitute checks"—high-quality digital reproductions of original cheques that are legally equivalent for clearing purposes, allowing banks to process imaged files instead of physical paper to expedite settlement. Electronic cheques (e-cheques) extend this by converting cheque data into EFT formats for online submission, maintaining familiarity while leveraging digital speed under frameworks like Check 21.

Risks and Protections

Fraud Mechanisms

Cheque fraud encompasses various deceptive practices aimed at unlawfully obtaining funds through the manipulation or misuse of cheques. Common mechanisms include forgery, embezzlement, identity theft, and other tactics such as kiting or the use of stolen blank cheques. These methods exploit vulnerabilities in cheque processing, often resulting in substantial financial losses for individuals and institutions. Forgery involves the unauthorized alteration or replication of cheque details to divert funds. Fraudsters may alter the amount, signature, or payee by using chemical solvents to erase original ink, a technique known as check washing, allowing them to rewrite higher amounts or change the recipient's name without visible damage. Alternatively, they scrape off printed information with abrasive tools or apply white-out before reprinting details. Signatures are commonly forged on stolen cheques to mimic the account holder's authorization, while payees are modified to redirect payments to accomplices. Counterfeit duplicates are created using desktop publishing software, high-quality printers, and magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) technology to produce realistic replicas of legitimate cheques. Embezzlement occurs when insiders, such as employees with access to financial systems, misuse their positions to issue fictitious or altered cheques for personal gain. This internal fraud often involves creating fake vendor payments or payroll cheques drawn on company accounts, diverting funds without detection during routine reconciliations. For instance, perpetrators may forge signatures on legitimate blanks or inflate amounts on real transactions, exploiting trust within organizations. Such schemes have been documented in cases where executives funneled millions through repeated fictitious issuances. Identity theft facilitates cheque fraud by enabling criminals to use stolen personal information to open new bank accounts or access existing ones for issuing fraudulent cheques. Thieves obtain details like Social Security numbers or account numbers through data breaches or phishing, then impersonate victims to establish accounts from which they write and deposit bogus cheques. Stolen cheques themselves can expose sensitive information, amplifying the risk as fraudsters leverage it for broader identity-based schemes, such as endorsing and cashing under false identities. Other methods include check kiting, where fraudsters exploit the processing delay, or "float," between accounts by writing cheques without sufficient funds and depositing them to create artificial balances. This involves cycling funds across multiple accounts to withdraw cash before discrepancies are detected. Stolen blank cheques are another tactic, where unused forms are pilfered from mail or storage and completed with forged details for immediate deposit or cashing. Global cheque fraud losses have been significant, with the United States alone reporting over $1.3 billion in financial institution losses in 2023, prior to accelerated digital payment adoption. Check fraud attempts rose 10% from 2023 to 2024, affecting 63% of organizations (as of 2024). In the Americas, which account for 80% of worldwide incidents, total losses reached $21 billion that year.

Dishonoured Cheques

A dishonoured cheque, also known as a bounced or returned cheque, occurs when a bank refuses to honour the payment due to issues unrelated to fraudulent intent, such as insufficient funds in the drawer's account. Common reasons for dishonour include non-sufficient funds (NSF), where the account balance is too low to cover the cheque amount because banks do not reserve or hold funds when a cheque is written; the funds remain available in the account until the cheque is presented and cleared, allowing the drawer to deplete the balance through other transactions in the interim; account closure, if the drawer's bank account has been closed prior to presentation; or signature mismatch, where the signature on the cheque does not match the specimen on file with the bank. Upon presentation, the paying bank returns the cheque to the depositing bank, typically marking it with a reason code or description to indicate the cause of dishonour, such as "NSF" for insufficient funds or "account closed." For electronic ACH transactions, standardized NACHA codes like R01 for NSF or R02 for closed account apply. The returned cheque is then forwarded to the payee, who receives notification of the failure during the clearing process. Both the drawer and payee often incur fees as a result of the dishonour. The drawer's bank typically charges an NSF fee, averaging around $18 in the US (as of 2024). The payee's bank may impose a returned item fee, and the payee can legally add a service charge to the drawer, capped at $20–$40 depending on state law, such as $25 under California's Civil Code § 1719. Legal repercussions for dishonour vary by jurisdiction but generally begin with civil remedies. In the US, the payee can pursue a civil suit against the drawer under the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) Article 3 to recover the cheque amount, plus interest at the applicable legal rate from dishonor and collection costs. In contrast, some jurisdictions treat repeated or knowing dishonour as criminal; for instance, under Section 138 of India's Negotiable Instruments Act, 1881, the drawer faces up to two years' imprisonment, a fine up to twice the cheque amount, or both, if the payee issues a demand notice and payment is not made within 15 days. Dishonour can also affect the drawer's banking reputation through consumer reporting agencies. In the US, agencies like ChexSystems record instances of NSF or returned cheques, which may remain on the report for up to five years and hinder the drawer's ability to open new accounts at over 80,000 financial institutions, though it does not directly impact traditional credit scores from bureaus like Equifax. If unpaid, the debt may enter collections, indirectly harming credit scores. To recover funds, the payee may first send a formal demand letter to the drawer requesting payment within a specified period, often 10–30 days. If unresolved, the payee can file in small claims court for amounts under jurisdictional limits (e.g., $5,000–$10,000 in most US states), where processes are simplified and no attorney is required, allowing recovery of the principal, fees, and court costs.

Security Measures

Individuals and businesses can implement personal protections to safeguard cheques against theft and unauthorized use. Secure storage practices include maintaining a "clean desk" policy, restricting access to cheque stock through segregated duties, and using locked cabinets or safes to prevent internal or external theft. For businesses, positive pay systems provide an automated layer of defense by requiring the issuer to upload details of issued cheques—such as check number, amount, date, payee name, and account number—to the bank, which then matches these against presented items and flags discrepancies for review. This service helps prevent alterations or counterfeits, with banks reporting average fraud losses of around $1,500 per incident, though it requires timely submission to avoid processing errors. Banks employ verification protocols to authenticate cheques before processing, involving checks for completeness, signatures, dates, and security features, often using automated systems that cross-reference account details and real-time data. AI-driven detection enhances these protocols by analyzing anomalies in cheque images, such as irregular patterns or alterations, using machine learning to flag potential fraud with high accuracy and reducing manual review needs. Watermark validation is a key physical check, where tellers or scanners confirm intricate, light-sensitive designs embedded in the paper, visible under ultraviolet light or angled viewing, to verify authenticity and deter replication. Emerging technologies include blockchain pilots for digital cheques, which use decentralized ledgers to issue, validate, and clear transactions immutably, incorporating cryptography, OTP verification, and fraud prediction algorithms achieving up to 80% accuracy in anomaly detection. Mobile deposit security features limits on transaction amounts, such as daily or monthly caps, combined with image validation, encryption, and multifactor authentication to minimize risks during remote processing. Legal safeguards in the United States are provided by the Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) § 3-417, which imposes presentment warranties on those seeking payment, ensuring the cheque is unaltered, signatures are authorized, and the presenter is entitled to enforce it, allowing drawees to recover losses plus expenses from warrantors. In the European Union, the Payment Services Directive (PSD2) establishes frameworks for secure payment authentication and incident reporting, though it excludes paper cheques; it mandates strong customer authentication and fraud monitoring for electronic equivalents, influencing broader cheque-related protections. Best practices emphasize avoiding post-dating cheques, as banks may process them prematurely, leading to overdrafts or fees, and instead opting for electronic payments or payment plans for reliability. For high-risk transactions, such as large amounts or unfamiliar parties, alternatives like wire transfers, automated clearing house (ACH) payments, or virtual cards are recommended to reduce exposure while maintaining efficiency. Drawers facing situations where a cheque remains unprocessed despite payee confirmation of receipt may follow up in writing, referencing the confirmation and the approaching stale date (typically six months), to request status. If unresolved, the drawer can issue a stop payment order on the original cheque and provide a replacement via trackable delivery; for significant amounts, consulting legal counsel is advisable to mitigate risks of non-performance.

References

  1. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cheque
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