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Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Pan Asia Bank Internet Banking - Standing Orders - YouTube
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A standing order (or a standing instruction) is an instruction a bank account holder ("the payer") gives to his or her bank to pay a set amount at regular intervals to another's ("the payee's") account. The instruction is sometimes known as a banker's order.

They are typically used to pay rent, mortgage or any other fixed regular payments. Because the amounts paid are fixed, a standing order is not usually suitable for paying variable bills such as credit cards or gas and electricity bills.

Standing orders are available in the banking systems of a number of countries, including Germany, Bulgaria, the United Kingdom, Barbados, the Republic of Ireland, India, Netherlands, Russia, Pakistan, Malaysia, Ukraine and presumably many others. In the United States, and other countries where cheques are more popular than bank transfers, a similar service is available, in which the bank automatically mails a cheque to the specified payee.


Video Standing order (banking)



Country differences

Germany

A standing order (Dauerauftrag) can run for a set number of payments, a set period of time, or until cancelled.

The Netherlands

Standing orders (periodieke overschrijvingen) are available for a set period of time or until cancelled, to any recipient in the SEPA space. They should not be confused with doorlopende machtigingen (periodic direct debits).

Japan

A standing order (??????) runs until cancelled. They can be cancelled at the account holder's request

South Korea

A standing order (???????) runs until cancelled. They can be cancelled at the account holder's request. The bank charges fees (average 3000KRW) per transfer.

Spain

A standing order (adeudo por domiciliaciĆ³n) can be set up to run for a set period of time, not indefinitely. They can be cancelled at the account holder's request.

Switzerland

In Switzerland standing orders are available for a set period of time or until cancelled. They can be made to any recipient in the SEPA space.

UK & Ireland

A standing order can be set up to run for a set period of time, or indefinitely, and can be cancelled at the account holder's request. Standing orders are standardized by the trade body UK Payments Administration. In 2008 a number of banks began to introduce Faster Payments as the method of transfer for standing orders when available, in place of the slower BACS system; with this method payments reach the receiving account the same day, rather than after a delay of three days or more.


Maps Standing order (banking)



Difference from direct debit

Standing orders are distinct from direct debits; both are methods of setting up repeated transfers of money from one account to another, but they operate in different ways. The fundamental difference is that standing orders send payments arranged by the payer, while direct debits are specified and collected by the payee.

  • A standing order can be set up and modified only by the payer, and is for amounts specified by the payer to be paid at specified times (usually a fixed amount at a specified interval examples). The amount can be paid into any bank account, which need not belong to an organisation vetted by the payer's bank.
  • A direct debit requires the payer authorize the payee take a direct debit for any amount at any time, or to instruct the bank to honour direct debit requests from a specified payee. The payee has full control over the payments. They can vary the amount and frequency of payments without further authorisation from the customer (subject to providing the customer with the required advance notice). The payer has no direct control over these payments, but can cancel the direct debit at any time, with no reason required, and require the return of disputed payments. It is not possible to authorise an individual to take direct debits; only organisations that have a contract with the payer's bank, or have been vetted by it, can do this.

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See also

  • Overdraft

James-SC.co.uk | Graphic Designer and Writer, Southampton, UK.
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References

Source of article : Wikipedia