ChatterBank1 min ago
Proof of posting. If my credit card cheque arrives late or is lost in post My credit card supplier demands £12 late payment fee can this be claimed from Royal mail?,
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Royal Mail Special Delivery is hardly cost effective in this case.
Cost of delivery of cheque = £11.35
Consequential loss coverage = £1.75
Thus to ensure you are able to claim for the consequential loss of £12 (late payment fee) in the event of a delay in delivery, you must pay £13.10 in postal charges.
Cost of delivery of cheque = £11.35
Consequential loss coverage = £1.75
Thus to ensure you are able to claim for the consequential loss of £12 (late payment fee) in the event of a delay in delivery, you must pay £13.10 in postal charges.
I think that you can send this by signed for post which for small light envelopes is only around £1.30 or so. So it may be worthwhile using this method in future. However as hc4361 says, the best way is to set up a DD, or if you use online banking pay them by bacs, the new faster payments system ensures that most payments sent online arrive the same day.
Cheers Sue
Cheers Sue
I pay my credit card bills online directly from my bank account. This avoids the postal system altogether. Always seems to work very well. I am now with Halifax and it is very simple to set up payment, unlike Royal Bank of Scotland which was quite a business to set up a new payee. (plus Halifax give you a fiver a month!)
no, you can't. I have got round this by one of two ways:
1. go into your bank with the statement and make the payment over the counter, you then get the slip stamped with the date of payment, or
2. pay on-line if you have on-line banking. This facility has been a godsend as I can instruct my bank to pay but defer payment until a date I choose (ie after payday)
I had the same worries as you about cheque payments being delayed in the mail - that worries been removed by doing one of the above each month.
1. go into your bank with the statement and make the payment over the counter, you then get the slip stamped with the date of payment, or
2. pay on-line if you have on-line banking. This facility has been a godsend as I can instruct my bank to pay but defer payment until a date I choose (ie after payday)
I had the same worries as you about cheque payments being delayed in the mail - that worries been removed by doing one of the above each month.
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