SECTION
229.10—Next-Day Availability
A.
Business Days and Banking Days 1. This section,
as well as other provisions of this subpart governing the availability
of funds, provides that funds must be made available for withdrawal
not later than a specified number of business days following the banking
day on which the funds are deposited. Thus, a deposit is considered
made only on a banking day, i.e., a day that the bank is open to the
public for carrying on substantially all of its banking functions.
For example, if a deposit is made at an ATM on a Saturday, Sunday,
or other day on which the bank is closed to the public, the deposit
is considered received on that bank’s next banking day.
2. Nevertheless, business days are
used to determine the number of days following the banking day of
deposit that funds must be available for withdrawal. For example,
if a deposit of a local check were made on a Monday, the availability
schedule requires that funds be available for withdrawal on the second
business day after deposit. Therefore, funds must be made available
on Wednesday regardless of whether the bank was closed on Tuesday
for other than a standard legal holiday as specified in the definition
of “business day.”
9-090.1
1. This paragraph implements the
EFA Act’s requirement for next-day availability for cash deposits
to accounts at a depositary bank “staffed by individuals employed
by such institution.”
2 Under this paragraph, cash deposited in an account at a staffed
teller station on a Monday must become available for withdrawal by
the start of business on Tuesday. It must become available for withdrawal
by the start of business on Wednesday if it is deposited by mail,
at a proprietary ATM, or by other means other than at a staffed teller
station.
9-091
1. The EFA Act provides next-day availability for
funds received for deposit by wire transfer. The regulation uses the
term electronic payment, rather than wire transfer,
to include both wire transfers and ACH credit transfers under the
next-day availability requirement. (See discussion of definitions
of automated clearinghouse, electronic payment, and wire transfer in section 229.2.)
2. The EFA Act requires that funds received by wire transfer
be available for withdrawal not later than the business day following
the day a wire transfer is received. This paragraph clarifies what
constitutes receipt of an electronic payment. For the purposes of
this paragraph, a bank receives an electronic payment when the bank
receives both payment in finally collected funds and the payment instructions
indicating the customer accounts to be credited and the amount to
be credited to each account. For example, in the case of Fedwire,
the bank receives finally collected funds at the time the payment
is made. (See 12 CFR 210.31.) Finally collected funds generally
are received for an ACH credit transfer when they are posted to the
receiving bank’s account on the settlement day. In certain cases,
the bank receiving ACH credit payments will not receive the specific
payment instructions indicating which accounts to credit until after
settlement day. In these cases, the payments are not considered received
until the information on the account and amount to be credited is
received.
3. This paragraph also establishes the extent to which
an electronic payment is considered made. Thus, if a participant on
a private network fails to settle and the receiving bank receives
finally settled funds representing only a partial amount of the payment,
it must make only the amount that it actually received available for
withdrawal.
4. The availability requirements of this regulation do
not preempt or invalidate other rules, regulations, or agreements
which require funds to be made available on a more prompt basis. For
example, the next-day availability requirement for ACH credits in
this section does not preempt ACH association rules and Treasury regulations
(31 CFR 210) which provide that the proceeds of these credit payments
be available to the recipient for withdrawal on the day the bank receives
the funds.
9-092
1. The EFA Act generally requires that funds be
made available on the business day following the banking day of deposit
for Treasury checks, state and local government checks, cashier’s
checks, certified checks, teller’s checks, and on-us checks, under
specified conditions. (Treasury checks are checks drawn on the Treasury
of the United States and have a routing number beginning with the
digits 0000.) This section also requires next-day availability for
additional types of checks not addressed in the EFA Act. Checks drawn
on a Federal Reserve Bank or a Federal Home Loan Bank and U.S. Postal
Service money orders also must be made available on the first business
day following the day of deposit under specified conditions. For the
purposes of this section, all checks drawn on a Federal Reserve Bank
or Federal Home Loan Bank that contain in the MICR line a routing
number that is listed in appendix A are subject to the next-day availability
requirement if they are deposited in an account held by a payee of
the check and in person to an employee of the depositary bank, regardless
of the purpose for which the checks were issued. For all new accounts,
even if the new-account exception is not invoked, traveler’s checks
must be included in the $5,525 aggregation of checks deposited on
any one banking day that are subject to the next-day availability
requirement. (See section 229.13(a).)
9-093
2. Deposit in Account of Payee One
statutory condition to receipt of next-day availability of Treasury
checks, state and local government checks, cashier’s checks, certified
checks, and teller’s checks is that the check must be “endorsed only
by the person to whom it was issued.” The EFA Act could be interpreted
to include a check that has been indorsed in blank and deposited into
an account of a third party that is not named as payee. The Board
believes that such a check presents greater risks than a check deposited
by the payee and that Congress did not intend to require next-day
availability for such checks. The regulation, therefore, provides
that funds must be available on the business day following deposit
only if the check is deposited in an account held by a payee of the
check. For the purposes of this section, payee does not include transferees
other than named payees. The regulation also applies this condition
to Postal Service money orders and checks drawn on Federal Reserve
Banks and Federal Home Loan Banks.
9-094
3. Deposits Made to an Employee of the Depositary Bank a. In most cases, next-day availability of the proceeds
of checks subject to this section is conditioned on the deposit of
these checks in person to an employee of the depositary bank. If the
deposit is not made to an employee of the depositary bank on the premises
of such bank, the proceeds of the deposit must be made available for
withdrawal by the start of business on the second business day after
deposit, under paragraph (c)(2) of this section. For example, second-day
availability rather than next-day availability would be allowed for
deposits of checks subject to this section made at a proprietary ATM,
night depository, through the mail or a lock box, or at a teller station
staffed by a person who is not an employee of the depositary bank.
Second-day availability may also be allowed for deposits picked up
by an employee of the depositary bank at the customer’s premises;
such deposits would be considered made upon receipt at the branch
or other location of the depositary bank. Employees of a contractual
branch would not be considered employees of the depositary bank for
the purposes of this regulation, and deposits at contractual branches
would be treated the same as deposits to a proprietary ATM for the purpose
of this regulation. (See also the commentary to section 229.19(a).)
b. In the case of Treasury checks, the EFA Act and regulation
do not condition the receipt of next-day availability to deposits
at staffed teller stations. Therefore, Treasury checks deposited at
a proprietary ATM must be accorded next-day availability, if the check
is deposited to an account of a payee of the check.
9-095
4. On-Us Checks The EFA Act and regulation require next-day availability
for on-us checks, i.e., checks deposited in a branch of the depositary
bank and drawn on the same or another branch of the same bank, if
both branches are located in the same state or check-processing region.
Thus, checks deposited in one branch of a bank and drawn on another
branch of the same bank must receive next-day availability even if
the branch on which the checks are drawn is located in another check-processing
region but in the same state as the branch in which the check is deposited.
For the purposes of this requirement, deposits at facilities that
are not located on the premises of a brick-and-mortar branch of the
bank, such as off-premise ATMs and remote depositories, are not considered
deposits made at branches of the depositary bank.
9-096
5. First $225 a. The EFA Act and regulation also require that up to $225 of the
aggregate deposit by check or checks not subject to next-day availability
on any one banking day be made available on the next business day.
For example, if $70 were deposited in an account by check(s) on a
Monday, the entire $70 must be available for withdrawal at the start
of business on Tuesday. If $400 were deposited by check(s) on a Monday,
this section requires that $225 of the funds be available for withdrawal
at the start of business on Tuesday. The portion of the customer’s
deposit to which the $225 must be applied is at the discretion of
the depositary bank, as long as it is not applied to any checks subject
to next-day availability. The $225 next-day availability rule does
not apply to deposits at nonproprietary ATMs.
b. The $225 that must be made available under this rule
is in addition to the amount that must be made available for withdrawal
on the business day after deposit under other provisions of this section.
For example, if a customer deposits a $1,000 Treasury check and a
$1,000 local check in its account on Monday, $1,225 must be made available
for withdrawal on Tuesday—the proceeds of the $1,000 Treasury check,
as well as the first $225 of the local check.
c. A depositary bank may aggregate all local and nonlocal
check deposits made by a customer on a given banking day for the purposes
of the $225 next-day availability rule. Thus, if a customer has two
accounts at the depositary bank, and on a particular banking day makes
deposits to each account, $225 of the total deposited to the two accounts
must be made available on the business day after deposit. Banks may
aggregate deposits to individual and joint accounts for the purposes
of this provision.
d. If the customer deposits a $500 local check and gets
$225 cash back at the time of deposit, the bank need not make an additional
$225 available for withdrawal on the following day. Similarly, if
the customer depositing the local check has a negative book balance,
or negative available balance in its account at the time of deposit,
the $225 that must be available on the next business day may be made
available by applying the $225 to the negative balance, rather than
making the $225 available for withdrawal by cash or check on the following
day.
9-097
6. Special Deposit Slips a. Under the EFA Act, a depositary bank
may require the use of a special deposit slip as a condition to providing
next-day availability for certain types of checks. This condition
was included in the EFA Act because many banks determine the availability
of their customers’ check deposits in an automated manner by reading the
MICR-encoded routing number on the deposited checks. Using these procedures,
a bank can determine whether a check is a local or nonlocal check,
a check drawn on the Treasury, a Federal Reserve Bank, a Federal Home
Loan Bank, or a branch of the depositary bank, or a U.S. Postal Service
money order. Appendix A includes the routing numbers of certain categories
of checks that are subject to next-day availability. The bank cannot
require a special deposit slip for these checks.
b. A bank cannot distinguish whether the check
is a state or local government check, cashier’s check, certified check,
or teller’s check by reading the MICR-encoded routing number, because
these checks bear the same routing number as other checks drawn on
the same bank that are not accorded next-day availability. Therefore,
a bank may require a special deposit slip for these checks.
c. The regulation specifies that
if a bank decides to require the use of a special deposit slip (or
a special deposit envelope in the case of a deposit at an ATM or other
unstaffed facility) as a condition to granting next-day availability
under paragraphs (c)(1)(iv) or (c)(1)(v) of this section or second
day availability under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, and if the
deposit slip that must be used is different from the bank’s regular
deposit slips, the bank must either provide the special slips to its
customers or inform its customers how such slips may be obtained and
make the slips reasonably available to the customers.
d. A bank may meet this requirement
by providing customers with an order form for the special deposit
slips and allowing sufficient time for the customer to order and receive
the slips before this condition is imposed. If a bank provides deposit
slips in its branches for use by its customers, it also must provide
the special deposit slips in the branches. If special deposit envelopes
are required for deposits at an ATM, the bank must provide such envelopes
at the ATM.
e. Generally, a teller is not required to advise depositors
of the availability of special deposit slips merely because checks
requiring special deposit slips for next-day availability are deposited
without such slips. If a bank provides the special deposit slips only
upon the request of a depositor, however, the teller must advise the
depositor of the availability of the special deposit slips, or the
bank must post a notice advising customers that the slips are available
upon request. Such notice need not be posted at each teller window,
but the notice must be posted in a place where consumers seeking to
make deposits are likely to see it before making their deposits. For
example, the notice might be posted at the point where the line forms
for teller service in the lobby. The notice is not required at any
drive-through teller windows nor is it required at night depository
locations, or at locations where consumer deposits are not accepted.
If a bank prepares a deposit for a depositor, it must use a special
deposit slip where appropriate. A bank may require the customer to
segregate the checks subject to next-day availability for which special
deposit slips could be required, and to indicate on a regular deposit
slip that such checks are being deposited, if the bank so instructs
its customers in its initial disclosure.
7. Dollar Amount Adjustment See section 229.11 for the rules regarding
adjustments for inflation every five years to the dollar amounts used
in this section.