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As I understand it available balance are funds that you can actually use right now. Present balance are the previous business day balance plus current debits and deposits according to Google and my personal experience. The present balance is in a state of flux and not settled yet. I always go by available balance as the true amount of funds I have access to.
I made a cash deposit at into Chase checking account. The present balance vs available balance are the same amount. But deposit itself is still pending. Should not available balance be lower than present balance until the deposit is posted?
@kremonis wrote:Present balance are the previous business day balance plus current debits and deposits this is a credit union's typical way of describing/calculating a present balance. chase describes it as: "The total amount of money recorded in your account, including funds not yet available for you to use. This includes pending transactions, authorization holds that are not yet posted or deposits that have not yet been made available. "
and my personal experience. The present balance is in a state of flux and not settled yet. I always go by available balance as the true amount of funds I have access to. this is right if the available balance is $1000, you can spend $1000 on your card or take out $1000 at an atm
cash deposits typically credit instantly, there's no delay for moving to the available balance
Account balance $800
Cash deposit: $200
available balance reflects instantly as $1000
check deposits on the other hang can often be held for some time before the funds move to the available balance
Account balance $800
Check deposit: $200
Present Balance $1,000
available Balance $800 ... for three days until the check clears and then it's $1,000.
































Agree with @kremonis.
Cash deposits typically credit instantly.
Also transfers from other accounts at same institution.
Savings to checking, MM to savings, CD maturing, etc.
Sometimes banks put a hold on checks to make sure they get paid before they credit your account.
I've seen Chase take up to ten days, but more often it's either two days or available instantly.