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Cashing a US Cheque in Canada

Discussion in 'General Business' started by Dekker, Apr 29, 2006.

  1. #1
    OK, so I'm about to receive my first payment cheque (I've done EFT, but another company only sends cheques).

    Anyways, I'm assuming they're going to list the amount in USD? Will my bank convert it for me, or how does it work?
     
    Dekker, Apr 29, 2006 IP
  2. Roman

    Roman Buffalo Tamerâ„¢

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    #2
    Yes it will, just take it to the bank and they'll accept it, but they more than likely will put a hold on it.
     
    Roman, Apr 29, 2006 IP
  3. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #3
    Hmmm the problem is I use pcfinancial...they don't have a "bank" persay..it's just ATMs and self serve kiosks
     
    Dekker, Apr 29, 2006 IP
  4. Roman

    Roman Buffalo Tamerâ„¢

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    #4
    I've done this before, deposit it through the bank machine and for the total, enter the US total(do not convert yourself). Your balance will go up by the Canadian amount, but once they process the check they should make the correction and add the extra into your account.
     
    Roman, Apr 29, 2006 IP
  5. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #5
    funky, i should probably call them to make sure as well

    the only other US cheque i've cashed was from adbrite...for 21 cents :p
     
    Dekker, Apr 29, 2006 IP
  6. SeanW

    SeanW Peon

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    #6
    I use PCF too. Just deposit it in the bank machine as if it were a Canadian cheque (ie enter the face value). You'll see an extra credit go on your account a couple of days later. The only problem happens if you use Quicken to track spending, since it's difficult to correlate the credit to the original deposit if you have income from multiple USD sources.

    Sean
     
    SeanW, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  7. clancey

    clancey Peon

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    #7
    For your interest, we accidentally deposited a US dollar cheque into our Canadian dollar account at Bank of Montreal instead of into our US dollar account.

    BMO put a 30-day hold on the cheque and is charging a huge amount to process the cheque, plus paying a worse rate of currency exchange than we can get at an independent currency dealer.

    If you expect to deal in enough US dollars, you would be wise to get a US dollar bank account. You can then convert money in larger amounts at independent dealers, often getting a better rate than at the bank. This also opens the door to getting a US dollar credit card, which you can use on travels to the US or online shopping at US sites. Instead of paying a currency surcharge on your debt and suffering a currency discount on your income -- you pay US dollar debt with US dollars.
     
    clancey, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  8. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #8
    Hmm...I might just do that, thanks :)
     
    Dekker, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  9. wheel

    wheel Peon

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    #9
    If you're using PC Financial, you're kinda screwed (it's what we use for our personal stuff, I've been through this). If you deposit a cheque, they'll take it as Canadian. Then at some undetermined future point, you'll get credited for the exchange. Not a good way to go.

    Plus, if you're letting the banks do the exchange, you'd best grap your ankles for the treatment you're going to get.

    If it's a small amount, get a canadian account at an offline bank. Deposit it and they'll convert it at the same time as you deposit it (i.e. they'll say $100+$11conversion=$111 deposit).

    If it's a bit bigger amount, consider getting a US dollar account at a regular bank (say Scotiabank). Then there's no conversion - your money stays in US funds. Then you can transfer to a Canadian funds account as needed. Or pull out US funds/money orders and stuff without getting screwed on the back and forth conversion.

    If you're talking more than $5kUS per month, then what you need to do is open a US dollar account. Then get a relationship with a decent currency exchange. Get a US money order once a month, walk it over to the currency exchange folks, convert to a canadian cheque, then walk the canadian funds back to your pc financial ATM.

    That's about it. I've done all of this for years, and that's about the best you can do. What you're trying to avoid longterm is the difference between the currency exchange rates on buy and sell US funds. If you 'sell' (i.e. deposit), they'll give you one rate. Want to get it back into US, you'll get a different rate, by upwards of 3 to 5%.
     
    wheel, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  10. wheel

    wheel Peon

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    #10
    Oh, and as clancy noted, I have a US dollar credit card which I use all the time. We just write a cheque from our US dollar account to pay the credit card bill.

    You'll have to balance the costs of keeping a seperate bank account for all this though.
     
    wheel, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  11. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #11
    I know INGdirect has US currency accounts...perhaps I'll open one with them...don't know how depositing a cheque with them will work though...


    I'm a bit confused by this...would the currency exchange happen at the bank or, for example should I go to Money Mart or Western Union?
     
    Dekker, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  12. wheel

    wheel Peon

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    #12
    Neither of moneymart or western union.

    Look in the yellow pages for currency exchange places - find places where businesses go to exchange their us dollars, not joe off the street. They'll likely want a minimum of $5000 per transaction, but if you do that or higher, they'll give you a decent exchange rate.
     
    wheel, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  13. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #13
    Stupid question, but do checks expire? :p
     
    Dekker, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  14. Danny

    Danny Active Member

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    #14
    Yeha your bank will handle it. There is usually a longer clearance on it like 3 weeks and a small fee for the conversion, but nothing too hideous
     
    Danny, Apr 30, 2006 IP
  15. BigGuy

    BigGuy Member

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    #15
    I believe cheques go stale after 6 months. I'm not sure if the same applies for US checks in Canadian accounts.
     
    BigGuy, May 3, 2006 IP
  16. cwvps

    cwvps Well-Known Member

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    #16
    yeah banks convert it on that days exchange cash rate.
     
    cwvps, May 3, 2006 IP
  17. Dekker

    Dekker Peon

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    #17
    apparently they don't if you had read the thread :p
     
    Dekker, May 3, 2006 IP
  18. raceway

    raceway Peon

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    #18
    I thought that with the new atm software PCF is using (windows), you have the option of choosing to deposit USD funds and it will tell you the conversion rate to CAD right there on the screen. I thought that was one of the reasons behind upgrading the software.
     
    raceway, May 3, 2006 IP