To understand your legal rights and
responsibilities regarding your EFT account, read the documents you receive
from the financial institution that issued your "access device."
That is, a card, code or other means of accessing your account to initiate
electronic fund transfers. Although the means varies by institution, it
often involves a card and/or a PIN. No one should know your PIN except you
and select employees of the financial institution.
Before you contract for EFT services or make
your first electronic transfer, the institution must tell you the following
information in a form you can keep.
A summary of your liability for
unauthorized transfers.
The telephone number and address of the
person to be notified if you think an unauthorized transfer has been or
may be made, a statement of the institution's "business days"
(which is, generally, the days the institution is open to the public for
normal business), and the number of days you have to report suspected
unauthorized transfers.
The type of transfers you can make, fees
for transfers, and any limits on the frequency and dollar amount of
transfers.
A summary of your right to receive
documentation of transfers, to stop payment on a pre-authorized
transfer, and the procedures to follow to stop payment.
A notice describing the procedures you
must follow to report an error on a receipt for an EFT or your periodic
statement, to request more information about a transfer listed on your
statement, and how long you have to make your report.
A summary of the institution's liability
to you if it fails to make or stop certain transactions.
Circumstances under which the institution
will disclose information to third parties concerning your account.
A notice that you may be charged a fee by
ATMs where you don't have an account.
In addition to these disclosures, you will
receive two other types of information for most transactions: terminal
receipts and periodic statements. Separate rules apply to passbook accounts
from which pre-authorized transfers are drawn. The best source of
information about those rules is your contract with the financial
institution for that account. You're entitled to a terminal receipt each
time you initiate an electronic transfer, whether you use an ATM or make a
point-of-sale electronic transfer. The receipt must show the amount and date
of the transfer, and its type, such as "from savings to checking."
When you make a point-of-sale transfer, you'll probably get your terminal
receipt from the salesperson.
You won't get a terminal receipt for
regularly occurring electronic payments that you've pre-authorized, like
insurance premiums, mortgages, or utility bills. Instead, these transfers
will appear on your periodic statement. If the pre-authorized payments vary,
however, you should receive a notice of the amount that will be debited at
least 10 days before the debit takes place.
You're also entitled to a
periodic statement for each statement cycle in which an electronic transfer
is made. The statement must show the
amount of any transfer, the date it was credited or debited to your account,
the type of transfer and type of account(s) to or from which funds were
transferred, and the address and telephone number for inquiries. You're
entitled to a quarterly statement whether or not electronic transfers were
made.
Keep and compare your EFT receipts with your
periodic statements the same way you compare your credit card receipts with
your monthly credit card statement. This will help you make the best use of
your rights under federal law to dispute errors and avoid liability for
unauthorized transfers.