I have more stupid questions: How does one cash a money order?

Do you have a brokerage account? The firm I work for, as well as most big firms, accepts money orders as a form of deposit. It won’t be converted to cash, but you can, of course, request a withdrawal from the account once the money order is cleared. A bit time consuming, but there shouldn’t be any fees involved.

First, it’s good that your brother paid you back.

Second, use this money order to open a local bank account. That solves two problems, right?

I don’t know if this is the same company but if it is, it looks really sketchy. There’s no address listed, which never a good sign in my experience.

Local banks are becoming a real pain in the ass as well. A couple of years ago I had an account at a local bank in Florida, and my wife had a check issued to her that she signed to me. A perfectly negotiable instrument under UCC Section 3.

But, nope, bank policy, cannot cash 3rd party checks even though I had enough money in my account. No exceptions. Even though I could have taken that check to the hated Wal-Mart and they could have verified those funds in 2 seconds, a brick and mortar bank still needs the 5 business day rule.

I like online banking as well, but this particular situation is a pain in the ass.

Sign it over to a trusted friend who can write you a check.

But yeah, it’ll probably take 10 days to clear, from sketchy McSketchville Issuer.

Wait. . . Could you deposit the cashiers check into your own account? Does the bank accept cashiers checks for deposit?

And if you otherwise already had enough money in your account, you couldn’t just withdraw some of that, or write a check against it?

Walmart. The fee is three bucks, max, if it’s $1000 or less.

EDIT: Hah! I just read that you already knew that, Mean Old Lady.

I don’t know if you feel like opening a different account, but USAA will accept money orders for deposit via mail and several other methods.
Go to USAA.com and search ‘deposit money order’ for details.

They are a very good credit union. I have always been more than happy with their service. And their phone support is excellent.
They were formed to serve the military originally, and they are used to dealing with all sorts of money situations long distance.

USAA’s pretty awesome if you can get it, but not everybody can. (Every now and then I bug my dad (Vietnam vet) to sign up so that I can get an account with them, heh.)

Transferring money via paper can be a pain these days. I realize that OP’s money order is not USPS, but postal money orders would seem to be very convenient. AFAIK, post offices all over the world accept each others’ international money orders; the fees are very small; the purchaser can choose whether currency conversion is done at source or destination. (Thai post offices also accept Western Union money orders.)

Naw, even that doesn’t work, I tried that for a friend, and my bank refused to accept a third-party check, even for deposit to my account, which had enough balance in it to cover it. I asked why, they said “It’s our policy”. I asked why they have that policy, they said “to protect you”. I told them I’d sign a notarized statement that I assume all loss, damages or liability for it, and I was told “It’s our policy”, apparently only two answers in their mental rolodex.

It’s even worse if its a postal money order. It can only be cashed at a postal station that keeps enough cash on hand to cover it. They won’t even arrange to get the money if you tell them you will come back tomorrow.

If you know the person the check came from just ask them to pay cash, regular check or credit card (if you’re set up to accept them and are willing to pay the fee). Or ask a friend of family bennet with an account to cash it for you then sign it over.

Or get a real bank account and stop fooling with a faceless Internet bank.

I’m not positive a local bank would be any better in that regard. It seems like everything I receive from Wells Fargo comes from some out of state processing center.

I do not, but I suppose I can set one up. No worries if it’s time consuming. I still haven’t cashed this thing yet, which shows the kind of hurry I’m in. It is nice to know there are options other than giving some check cashing place half my money.

My dad’s a vet too. Woot!

Yeah, but I could go inside a local bank and take money out. I can’t walk into ING and request a withdrawal.

I have a friend who frequently loses their debit card and is a Wells Fargo customer. You can go to a Wells Fargo branch with ID and they will give you a temporary debit card. Then a permanent card will be mailed to you.

I am not saying that all banks work this way.

FWIW, Citibank sent my replacement ATM card via overnight courier (e.g. UPS). And Chase is aggressively advertising (at least in the NY metro area) that you can simply go into a branch and get a replacement card.

My credit union can top Wells Fargo, at least if you go to the right branch :D.

I went over there once with a dead debit card (my own fault, it had gone through the laundry. I’ve since found that a debit card will survive the washer, but not the dryer) and my ID. Twenty minutes later, I walked out with a nice new working card in my pocket. They didn’t even charge a replacement fee. :slight_smile: