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I am expecting a sum of money from by old job that they failed to pay me (long story) in the supposely near future.
Too much to let sit in my checking account so I'm planning on joining PenFed and NFCU and wanted to know members experience so far as funding the savings/share accounts.
I know they have small joining fees but I would like to join and fund immediately with about 5000 each.
Do I simply transfer the money from my checking account or is there something else to do.
I'm a little confused because I've read a few posts that stated certain difficulties in funding the accounts which seems strange to me.
My thoughts are you join and add them to external accounts for your checking and transfer whatever sum you would like.
Or is there something I am missing?
Any member experiences welcomed.
I'm not apping for any credit cards or other products simply looking to join and fund.
You are correct, setup external account on your primary checking ( nfcu, etc ) and hit the confirm button 👍 easy peasy . Some banks make you confirm little deposits unless the bank uses the plaid system.
@Iusedtolurk wrote:I am expecting a sum of money from by old job that they failed to pay me (long story) in the supposely near future.
Too much to let sit in my checking account so I'm planning on joining PenFed and NFCU and wanted to know members experience so far as funding the savings/share accounts.
I know they have small joining fees but I would like to join and fund immediately with about 5000 each.
Do I simply transfer the money from my checking account or is there something else to do.
I'm a little confused because I've read a few posts that stated certain difficulties in funding the accounts which seems strange to me.
My thoughts are you join and add them to external accounts for your checking and transfer whatever sum you would like.
Or is there something I am missing?
Any member experiences welcomed.
I'm not apping for any credit cards or other products simply looking to join and fund.
I will echo what fico82 said about nfcu. when i external transfer from my bank the funds are in my nfcu checking the next day. then to transfer funds between nfcu accounts is instant. lets say i wanted 5000 in savings and 5000 in checking, i would external transfer 10,000 from my bank to the nfcu checking and then do an internal instant transfer of 5000 from my nfcu checking to my nfcu savings giving me 5000 in each.
I have a savings at penfed but i opened it a while ago with 15 bucks and never use it so im not sure how the transfer works there.
The pluses and minuses,
NFCU has a checking account with no minimum balance required, it also gives you free unlimited checks for life. the one requirement they have is you need to write one check per year to keep the acct open. it comes with a debit card with thousands of no cost atm's.
PENFED requires a 500 minimum to open a checking account
@SUPERSQUID wrote:
@Iusedtolurk wrote:I am expecting a sum of money from by old job that they failed to pay me (long story) in the supposely near future.
Too much to let sit in my checking account so I'm planning on joining PenFed and NFCU and wanted to know members experience so far as funding the savings/share accounts.
I know they have small joining fees but I would like to join and fund immediately with about 5000 each.
Do I simply transfer the money from my checking account or is there something else to do.
I'm a little confused because I've read a few posts that stated certain difficulties in funding the accounts which seems strange to me.
My thoughts are you join and add them to external accounts for your checking and transfer whatever sum you would like.
Or is there something I am missing?
Any member experiences welcomed.
I'm not apping for any credit cards or other products simply looking to join and fund.
I will echo what fico82 said about nfcu. when i external transfer from my bank the funds are in my nfcu checking the next day. then to transfer funds between nfcu accounts is instant. lets say i wanted 5000 in savings and 5000 in checking, i would external transfer 10,000 from my bank to the nfcu checking and then do an internal instant transfer of 5000 from my nfcu checking to my nfcu savings giving me 5000 in each.
I have a savings at penfed but i opened it a while ago with 15 bucks and never use it so im not sure how the transfer works there.
The pluses and minuses,
NFCU has a checking account with no minimum balance required, it also gives you free unlimited checks for life. the one requirement they have is you need to write one check per year to keep the acct open. it comes with a debit card with thousands of no cost atm's.
PENFED requires a 500 minimum to open a checking account
@SUPERSQUID Just to clarify you say you external transfer to nfcu checking then from nfcu checking you transfer to nfcu savings.
Can't you just external transfer to nfcu checking and external transfer to nfcu savings. Or do you have to have a nfcu checking also?
I was planning on just having savings accounts and not checking.
The external transfer would be from your bank to nfcu checking , it takes one business day for funds to appear in my nfcu checking..
The internal transfer would be from your nfcu checking to your nfcu savings, that tranfer is instant
Most banks have the external transfer option. it usually takes 1-3 days to set up. they will transfer some change like ie 23 cents and 48 cents in 2 different deposits to your nfcu checking and the ask you for the exact amount the two transfers were, after you complete that process you are good to go.
With nfcu you might as well have the checking too, its free and no minimum.
@Iusedtolurk wrote:I am expecting a sum of money from by old job that they failed to pay me (long story) in the supposely near future.
Too much to let sit in my checking account so I'm planning on joining PenFed and NFCU and wanted to know members experience so far as funding the savings/share accounts.
I know they have small joining fees but I would like to join and fund immediately with about 5000 each.
Do I simply transfer the money from my checking account or is there something else to do.
I'm a little confused because I've read a few posts that stated certain difficulties in funding the accounts which seems strange to me.
My thoughts are you join and add them to external accounts for your checking and transfer whatever sum you would like.
Or is there something I am missing?
Any member experiences welcomed.
I'm not apping for any credit cards or other products simply looking to join and fund.
Navy has a peculiarity, that you can't pull an ACH transfer into your deposit accounts, only into loan or credit card accounts. But you can always push the transfer from your outside account.
PenFed has a peculiarity, that it offers no free checking account.
They each have other peculiarities, but those are the ones most relevant to the present moment.
@Yasselife wrote:Using Zelle is instant, just need your phone or email to create one. Discover checking for example, ACH deposit takes around 7days with a minimum of $25, Zelle is the remedy.
@Yasselife wrote:Using Zelle is instant, just need your phone or email to create one. Discover checking for example, ACH deposit takes around 7days with a minimum of $25, Zelle is the remedy.
Zelle can be a problem. Your email address or cell phone number has to be dedicated to a single account. For people with multiple accounts it can be a disaster.
I can see using Zelle to send payments to other people. I can't see using Zelle to send payments to onesself at different financial institutions.
@SouthJamaica wrote:
@Yasselife wrote:Using Zelle is instant, just need your phone or email to create one. Discover checking for example, ACH deposit takes around 7days with a minimum of $25, Zelle is the remedy.
@Yasselife wrote:Using Zelle is instant, just need your phone or email to create one. Discover checking for example, ACH deposit takes around 7days with a minimum of $25, Zelle is the remedy.
Zelle can be a problem. Your email address or cell phone number has to be dedicated to a single account. For people with multiple accounts it can be a disaster.
I can see using Zelle to send payments to other people. I can't see using Zelle to send payments to onesself at different financial institutions.
Simple solution is to use different emails. A lot (most?) people have at least 2 emails. Or at least I do.