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Bank refuses to handle cash
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I wished to pay a £20 credit card statement at Co-Op Bank. I offered a £20 note, but was informed that :'We can't accept cash, sorry'.
Since when was this not legal tender ?
Since when was this not legal tender ?
Answers
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No best answer has yet been selected by Scylax. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.On a similar note, I purchased a mobile phone recently and was told that I had to buy £10 credit with it, fair enough, I had no problem with that, until I handed over cash and was told "oh sorry if you are paying cash you have to buy £20 credit".
So it does seem you get penalised for using proper money these days!
So it does seem you get penalised for using proper money these days!
Lloyds is my bank, but I have a Co-Op credit card too. Hitherto, no problem in paying cash into my local Co-op bank branch for credit card purchases. This present refusal is a new departure. Incidentally, Lloyds bank then accepted my cash without demur, though it was a debt to the Co-Op. A strange world we live in.
I have paid bills at my bank (which is Lloyds) but used my debit card so they can see the money coming out of my account. Cash handling is a different matter.
However - my life is so much easier since I have converted my Lloyds current account to one which I can manage on-line. I pay my Coop credit card on line that way, just instruct the bank to pay the required amount each month when the Coop statement comes in. No faffing, no queueing, no arguments about cash or cards. Worth looking into, scylax.
However - my life is so much easier since I have converted my Lloyds current account to one which I can manage on-line. I pay my Coop credit card on line that way, just instruct the bank to pay the required amount each month when the Coop statement comes in. No faffing, no queueing, no arguments about cash or cards. Worth looking into, scylax.
my local corner shop refused to sell my a mobile phone top up using a debit card once, they said they were "cash only" so i picked up a loaf of bread and pint of milk i needed, paid by card, got £10 cash back,then asked for a top up card and used that to pay, the look on the shop assistants face was priceless, it was almost like he was sure he had been ripped off, but could not work out how lol
maybe your bank doen't accept cash anymore?
Before you think that's off the wall, it's happened here twice. First Active stopped taking cash about months before they were shut down and merged with Ulster Bank. Then Halifax (Ireland) became cashless before they shut down. Not trying to make you worry, but when they closed their credit cards became payable in full immediately.
Before you think that's off the wall, it's happened here twice. First Active stopped taking cash about months before they were shut down and merged with Ulster Bank. Then Halifax (Ireland) became cashless before they shut down. Not trying to make you worry, but when they closed their credit cards became payable in full immediately.
Factor 30 : Yes, it was a Co-Op credit card I was trying to pay at a Co-Op bank. When I asked why, I was given a monosyllabic answer:' Regulations'.
I have used this same card for 22 years, and always paid in full, in cash. It is not a problem - in future I shall pay at Lloyds- a bank which accepts cash and smiles ruefully
when I explain about the Co-Op. They don't understand either...
I have used this same card for 22 years, and always paid in full, in cash. It is not a problem - in future I shall pay at Lloyds- a bank which accepts cash and smiles ruefully
when I explain about the Co-Op. They don't understand either...
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