Question:- Is it Safe to Give Out Your Bank Account Number?
Question:- Is it Safe to Give Out Your Bank Account Number?Question:- Is it Safe to Give Out Your Bank Account Number?Question:- Is it Safe to Give Out Your Bank Account Number?
Question: I am managing the utility of the house I am sharing with another person. He asks me to provide my bank account number, so that he can transfer his money to my account when paying the utility.
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I wonder if it is safe to give out my bank account number?
For example, if I am correct, many online payment just needs the account number to draw money out of it.
- Is giving out bank account number safer than handing a check to another person, since there are also account number printed on the check?
Thanks
Answers:
- Technically, no. There is very little security in the US for bank drafts. With your bank account routing number it is very easy for people to draw funds without your authorization. Another thing people can do is buy stuff online with "demand drafts". Essentially it works like a credit card number where the create an electronic version of a check to purchase things. There is generally no password, PIN or signature requirement.
That said, it is printed on every check you write so keeping it private isn't really practical. I'd make sure you trust anyone you give it to and watch your account statements closely.
An important thing to know is that a routing number isn't a one-way deal. If you give out the number for someone to wire you money, they can just as easily draft on the account.
Question: I am managing the utility of the house I am sharing with another person. He asks me to provide my bank account number, so that he can transfer his money to my account when paying the utility.
- I wonder if it is safe to give out my bank account number?For example, if I am correct, many online payment just needs the account number to draw money out of it.
- Is giving out bank account number safer than handing a check to another person, since there are also account number printed on the check?
Thanks
Answers:
- Technically, no. There is very little security in the US for bank drafts. With your bank account routing number it is very easy for people to draw funds without your authorization. Another thing people can do is buy stuff online with "demand drafts". Essentially it works like a credit card number where the create an electronic version of a check to purchase things. There is generally no password, PIN or signature requirement.
That said, it is printed on every check you write so keeping it private isn't really practical. I'd make sure you trust anyone you give it to and watch your account statements closely.
An important thing to know is that a routing number isn't a one-way deal. If you give out the number for someone to wire you money, they can just as easily draft on the account.
I think the answer depends very much on where you are.
I believe the other answer covers north america.
On contrast, in (continental) Europe, giving the account and bank number (IBAN and BIC) is a (the most) common way to enable someone to send money to you.
E.g. in Germany, you need much more than account number and bank number to withdraw money:
To "push" money to another account (wire transfer from your account to someone who gave you the other account + bank numbers), you either have to hand-sign a certain form, or (online) certain credentials (e.g. login & password / PIN + TAN) are needed. I.e. for defrauding you, the other would need to get your online credentials (for mTAN also your mobile phone, for chipTAN a TAN generator of your bank [easy] and your bank card, for (i)TAN your TAN list) or fake your signature.
There are also ways to allow someone to pull money from your account, see e.g. direct debit
For that you sign that the other side is allowed to withdraw specified amounts of money (at specified dates). This is either
In the first case, the withdrawal technically still needs your approval. In order not to create a huge risk of fraud, the rejecting here is really easy: If you tell your bank that you reject the payment,
The practical rule is that the payment is approved if you didn't reject within the first 6 weeks after the bank sent the account statement. In other words, until 4 1/2 months after the withdrawal (in case you have a bank that does only quarterly account statements), the one to get the money cannot be really sure that he actually has the money.
I think (but I'm not completely sure, maybe someone else can comment/edit) that these two possibilities are also what is used with debit card payments (EC/Maestro card - these are much more common here than real credit card payments).
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Question:- Is it Safe to Give Out Your Bank Account Number?
Reviewed by Munir
on
November 29, 2015
Rating: 5