Check 21
Check 21
Checks in the 21st Century
In October 2003, the Check Clearing for the 21st Century Act became law. Now
known simply as Check 21, the legislation's goals include "to
improve the overall efficiency of the nation's payments system."
Today, most checks must be physically transported - whether across town or
across the country - before they can be cleared. This is expensive and time-consuming.
Check 21 provides a new option: legal acceptance of paper reproductions of original
checks. This reproduction is called a "substitute check" and is produced from
a digital image of the original check.
Sample substitute check

This is a LEGAL COPY of your check. You can use it the same way you would use
the original check
Efficient Check Clearing Benefits You
The improvements brought about through Check 21 allow for faster payment processing
and even better service to you, the banking customer.
A few of the benefits include:
- Faster check clearing
- Decreased fraud
- Less paper
- Increased security
How Will Check 21 Affect You?
By Oct. 28, 2004, every bank will be required to accept substitute checks,
just as they currently accept your original paper checks. If you receive your
canceled checks or electronic images of your canceled checks with your account
statement, you will begin seeing substitute checks after that date. A substitute
check is the legal equivalent of the original check and will include all the
information contained on the original.
Check 21 includes several safeguards for checkwriting consumers. Check 21 helps
speed check clearing, so check fraud can be discovered faster. Faster fraud
detection means faster resolution for customers.
Another safeguard: A bank that creates a substitute check must warrant that
it is accurate. The bank also has to make sure that the substitute check is
produced in accordance with industry standards for quality.
A Word About Check Conversion
You may already have experienced two other emerging payment practices, and
each is an example of "check conversion," which uses the automated
clearinghouse, or ACH, system.
In the first example, a retailer converts a paper check into an electronic
ACH payment on the spot. In this situation, if you've written a check
for a purchase, you are handed the check back immediately after it's converted
into an electronic ACH payment at the store or shop.
In the second example, regular billers (telephone, utilities and credit card
providers, for example) convert your check payments into ACH payments. The check
has been "converted" to an electronic format, and you
won't receive a copy of the original. The payment will be reflected in your
bank statement, which becomes the legally accepted proof of your payment.
Keep in mind that both of these example transactions are different from substitute
checks. All of these changes allow for faster payment processing and even better
service to the nation's banking customers.
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