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Help! How do postal orders work ??


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I need to pay for an item I have bought by a postal order and have never used this method before !

 

How does it work ? Are they just like a cheque where you write out the persons name on it and post it to them ? :help:

 

Thanks

Lea

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Pretty similar, put the persons name on it who the postal order is for. If you cross it then they will have to pay it into a bank account. If you don't cross it then they can cash it straight away at the post office thus not having to wait for it to clear.

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Originally posted by Andy

You buy them from post offices, and they do make a small charge for supplying them.

 

It's an old fashoned thing though!

 

Don't knock 'em!

 

For folks who don't have a bank account that supports a cheque book for any reason - and I've been there - they're a God-send.

 

Crosisng them makes them more secure, btw, against being 'borrowed' in the post. If crossed they can only be paid in to a bank account. If uncrossed they can be cashed at a post office.

 

Most banks clear them like cheques - you wait about 5 days before you can draw on them. Ages ago they used to be treated as cash by my bank but they don't any more.

 

Joe

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Originally posted by nick2

I always put the persons name on, I assume that they have to prove who they are at the Post Office when they cash them ?

 

Dont assume anything. I dont think there is any requirement for the payee to prove who they are; if it's crossed and marked a/c payee only then it must go in to the a/c payee's account and if you add "not negotiable" that means the PO cant be transferred to another payee.

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I've been paid by postal orders before for things I've sold on ebay. If my name is not put on then I do it myself, take it to the post office, sign it and no questions asked.

If the sender puts my name on and crosses it then I have to take it to my bank and pay it in there and wait for it to clear just like a cheque.

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