Email Money Transfer

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Interac Email Money Transfer (EMT) is a funds transfer service between personal accounts at participating Canadian financial institutions. The provider of this service is CertaPay, a division of Acxsys Corporation. If you bank in Canada you will be able to send the world's first, interbank-based Interac Email Money Transfers.


Contents

Participating institutions

Interac Email Money Transfers let you send and receive money quickly and easily right out of - or right into - your bank accounts. As of August 2006, only personal deposit account holders at one of the Big Five banks in Canada can send EMTs: BMO Bank of Montreal, CIBC, RBC Royal Bank, Scotiabank, or TD Canada Trust. However, any personal account holder in Canada can receive funds (see below).

How it works

An Email Money Transfer resembles in many aspects to an e-check. The money is not actually transferred by e-mail. Only the instructions to retrieve the funds are.

  • The sender opens an online banking session and chooses the recipient, the amount to send, as well as a security question and answer. The funds are debited instantly, usually for a surcharge.
  • An e-mail is then sent to the recipient, with instructions on how to retrieve the funds and answer the question, via a secure website.
    • If the recipient is subscribed to online banking at one of the participating institutions, the funds are deposited instantly at no extra charge.
    • If the recipient's deposit account is not at one of the participating institutions or not subscribed to online banking at all, the funds are deposited within three to five business days, and a surcharge (currently $4.00) is deducted from the amount received.

Benefits and disadvantages

Unlike a cheque, the funds from an EMT are not frozen. An EMT cannot bounce, as the funds are guaranteed. As long as both sender and recipient bank at one of the participating institutions, the funds are sent and received instantly.

However, like any online banking mode of payment, EMTs are vulnerable to phishing. Many Canadians in areas where the Big Five banks don't have much presence or who don't bank online are penalized by a surcharge when receiving EMTs. Unlike a real giro, an EMT requires intervention from the recipient for every single transaction. An EMT goes stale much faster than a cheque (after 30 days, the EMT is automatically cancelled and the sender is notified by e-mail to retrieve the funds.)[1].

References

  1. ^ Help Centre

External links

This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.