Financial Crooks

An Honest Crooks Shares Financial Tips and Investing Experiences

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Financial Planning
  • Self Directed Investing
  • BMO IL
  • CIBC IE
  • RBC DI
  • Free $$$

Tag Archives: high interest savings account

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

How to Close an Extra Tangerine Savings Account When You Reach Your Savings Goal

Posted on 2016 04 21 by BetCrooks

Eventually, you will have enough saved for that trip to Kuala Lumpur or that granite countertop or even possibly for that revised Sibley’s Bird Guide you’ve been eyeing covetously. When you reach your goal and take the money out to spend you may want to close that specific savings account at Tangerine: here’s how.

Can I Close All of My Tangerine Savings Accounts This Way?

No.

You can’t close your primary Tangerine Savings Account using their online close tool. Nor can you close a child’s bank account under your name. Nor a TFSA Savings account. If you want to close those accounts, you will have to phone Tangerine.

Basically, if they ever run a promotion to pay you a bonus for opening an account, such as your first Savings account, first TFSA account, or Child’s Savings account, they aren’t going to let you close it by clicking a few buttons on the screen. (In fact, they will never close their records showing you once HAD that type of account so you can’t get the bonus again in the future. They will, however, close it to all possible use and ability to sign in or see it. They’ll just keep track of it in another way.)

What Happens to My Final Interest Payment When I Close My Tangerine Savings Account?

Personally, I waited till the first of the month so that the previous month’s interest would be posted to the empty account. Then I transferred out the interest and closed the account on the first of the month so it would not earn any more interest. I did that so that my statements and transaction history, etc, would clearly show which account earned the interest.

Unfortunately, that means I can’t tell you where or how Tangerine pays the interest on a closed account. I suspect it pays it into whichever account you direct it to use. (If anyone else has the answer, please share it with a Comment.)

What Should I Do Before I Close My Tangerine Account?

I

  • waited till the first of the month to have the last interest payment paid into the closing account
  • looked at the account under View my Accounts, and clicked on it, so that I could look at the Current rate: and hover the cursor over the icon ? so that I could write down the “Interest, previous year” and “Interest, year to date”
  • downloaded and saved the last monthly statement for the account (I had already done this for previous months)
  • printed the transaction history for the account

Once the account is closed, you probably will not have access to this data anymore or you may only have it for a short time. In particular, I believe the transaction history will become inaccessible because it is opened from within the account selected. The statements will probably be available for the regular 18 months.

Why Did I Close My Tangerine Savings Account?

Well, I only closed one for the ensuite bathroom reno. Yes, we finally saved enough!

How To Close An Extra Tangerine Savings Account

  1. From the list on the left side of the screen, click on the link: View my Accounts
  2. Under the Saving heading, click on the link to the account you wish to close.
  3. At the top of the screen, under the Account Actions section, click on the link: Close my account
    It will warn you
    “Once you have closed this Account, it becomes permanently inaccessible.”
    Select which account to move any money into from the drop-down list.
    (Yes, you can select your external bank account if you wish.)
  4. Click on the Next button.

The Close Account Page

  1. Review the details of the closure. If you are sure you never want to use the account again or get any data for the account again, click on the button: Confirm
  2. Make a note of the confirmation number in case of any issues.
  3. Click on the Continue Banking button.

The account will no longer appear on your accounts list.

You can no longer access the account’s transaction history directly.

The account statement will still be part of your previous months’ overall savings accounts statement.

When you are finished banking, click on the Log me out link at the top right of the screen.

Clear your browser history and cache, and close your browser session.

You’re done!
Related Reading

  • Why I Didn’t Renew My Costco Membership

Join In
Did you find it this simple to close a savings account at your bank? Please share your experience with a comment.

image of thin green double line

 

Posted in Finances, Money Tips | Tagged daily interest savings account, high interest savings account, savings, savings account, Tangerine

Review: Why I Won’t Recommend Opening an Account at Zag Bank

Posted on 2016 04 16 by BetCrooks

I’m a bit miffed: hundreds of people successfully signed up with Zag Bank this January to take advantage of a limited time high interest rate of 2.5% on a savings account but I am not one of them. Instead, my attempt to open an account with Zag Bank went very poorly  and although each person I’ve spoken with has been very pleasant they were unable to  resolve the problem and unable to explain what went wrong and how it was fixed.

Why Did I Want a Zag Bank High Interest Savings Account and Why Am I Not Too Interested Now?

I wanted to open an account at Zag Bank because they had a promotional interest rate of 2.5% from January to May 31 2016. I have some large short-term savings for a home reno and hoped to make more than the current 0.8% offered by Tangerine and PC Financial.
Since then, EQ Bank launched offering an interest rate of 3% on a daily interest savings account. Although I started after I applied to open an account at Zag, my EQ Bank account is already open, I’ve tested transfers in and out of the account, and I’ve parked my cash there.

The EQ Bank 3% rate started in January 2016 and could end at any time (UPDATE: It’s dropping to 2.25% on April 18 2016) , which is partly why I was hoping to open a Zag Bank account.  I planned to use it if the EQ Bank rate dropped significantly before May 31.

Anyway, given that my EQ Bank account is working well I’m really not interested in trying any more to open an account at Zag.

The Comedy of Errors Began With a Mistake Made Purely By Me

Probably I would have a fully functional account if I had not made a mistake when first applying to Zag Bank. My mistake was that I made my first deposit cheque payable to myself rather than payable to Zag Bank. (When I opened accounts at other banks, that was how I made my first deposits.) I admit I did not read the instructions properly.

Yes, I was wrong!

Because the cheque was not made payable to Zag Bank, they refused to cash it, per their policy. Fair enough.

I mailed that cheque in on January 14.

On January 22, they sent me an email stating that they had not received a cheque from me and could I please mail one in or deposit one by taking a photo of it using an app. Their note said to ignore the note if I had already mailed in a cheque. So I ignored it.

Finally, on January 26, someone from Zag Bank phoned me to tell me that they could not cash the cheque I had mailed in because it was payable to myself, not to Zag Bank.

My First Conversation with the Zag Bank Customer Service Line Leaves Me Disquieted

Soon after they called me, I phoned Zag Bank to ask about the cheque they refused to cash.

I wanted to know

  • where was the cheque? Were they mailing it back to me? (If so, I figured I could correct the “payable to” to read Zag Bank, initial it, and mail it back in.)
  • if they weren’t mailing it back, were they going to keep it and deposit it after my account was fully opened? (After all, in general I will be mailing in cheques payable to myself so I can make deposits in the account.)

The answers were disquieting.

First, they would not accept a cheque that had been corrected and initialed. Why? I have no idea. I’ve corrected cheques and initialed them many times. It would be against their policy, though, I was told.

Also, I was told, once a cheque had been “dishonoured” by their system, it would be automatically rejected.

Second, the agent said that the cheque was “probably” shredded and only an image of it still existed although they weren’t actually sure where that image was! So mailing it back wouldn’t be an option.

I said I wasn’t really happy knowing a cheque was floating around that could be cashed out, even to myself, at any time which could cause my chequing account to go into overdraft. However, I agreed it sounded unlikely that it would happen and decided to let the matter drop.

I agreed to write a brand new cheque with a brand new date on it and made payable this time to Zag Bank, not me, and use their photo cheque deposit app to submit it.

How Well Did Using the Zag Bank App to Deposit a Cheque By Photo Work?

It catastrophically failed.

The image of the cheque went missing and no one could find it.

What Happened When I Tried to Deposit My Cheque to Zag Bank Using the App?

I thought it went perfectly.

I opened the email note with the “one time” link to use the App to take a photo of my cheque and deposit it. This was on January 28 2016.

I took a photo as requested of both the front and back of the cheque.

It submitted and I received a happy face message telling me that my cheque should be processed and my account fully opened within 5 business days. So I made a note of it and got on with my life.

After 6 business days, my cheque had still not cleared my bank and I saw no signs of life on my Zag Bank account when I signed in.

On about February 10, 2016, I phoned Zag to find out whether my cheque had been processed.

Zag Bank Had No Record of My Cheque Image

There was no sign of the image from my cheque anywhere at Zag. The agent I spoke to on the phone was very polite and helpful but he could not really do anything since there was nothing to work with. He agreed to have the matter looked into. I was told that someone would either phone me, or would send me a “secure email” on my Zag Bank account page. I said if I didn’t hear back that I would phone them  to see what they discovered when they looked for the image.

By Wednesday February 17, I had not received a phone call or an email, so I called Zag Bank.

Again, I spoke with a very pleasant helpful agent who confirmed there was still no sign of the image of my cheque. She offered to have a supervisor phone me in the afternoon but I declined because I would be busy then.

I asked if I could just submit the image of the cheque again.

Why Can’t I Submit an Image of my Cheque to Zag Bank If They Never Received the First One?

The agent was not sure whether this approach would work. She found and successfully re-sent my “welcome” email to me. I said I would use it to re-send the image of the cheque and hung up. (Bad mistake on my part.)

As soon as I opened the link in the email I was told I could not send any image of a cheque in to Zag Bank because I had already done so.

Sigh.

I phoned back in to Zag Bank and spoke with yet another very helpful, courteous customer service agent.

She suggested I could

  • mail in a new cheque.
  • try opening a totally different brand new Zag Bank account and deposit a new cheque either by mail or by using the App.

I don’t want to do either.

I’ve already paid for two cheques from my bank. I’ve already paid for one envelope and one stamp. I have spent about an hour in total now on the phone. I have NOTHING to show for these expenses or time.

I have lost faith and the thought of spending more money and time trying to get this process to work is not appealing.

Why Can’t the Zag Bank App Let Me Send In a New Image of My Cheque?

All I can say is that they must be using a very unforgiving computer program if there is NO WAY to send in an image of a cheque if the first image is rejected or lost.

The staff at Zag Bank do seem to want to help me fix this problem. It just appears that it is their computer system that is running the bank, not the other way around.

Why Don’t I Just Try Again?

I’m 98% sure that if I mail in a brand new cheque or if I try to open a second account with a brand new cheque it will all go perfectly.

The thing is, I’ve lost faith in Zag’s ability to resolve a fairly simple problem. It leaves me uneasy about how they would handle it if something major went wrong, like a transfer in or out from the bank “disappeared” in transit.

I’ve decided to just “let it go” for now. I’m stubborn, so I might try to open an account again in the future, but for now, I give up.

And Then The Cheque Was Mysteriously Found and Cashed and Deposited in My Zag Account!

And then after my last phone call with Zag, I received an email from Zag Bank dated February 19 welcoming me and stating they had now deposited my cheque and my account was fully active!

I wrote an email to customer service asking how and where my cheque’s image had been found. The answer I received was unsatisfactory as it did not say what had happened between when I sent in the image on January 28 and when they processed it on February 19. (The cheque cleared from my chequing account on February 23.)

The response was apologetic, kind and courteous but uninformative. “This was a rare occurrence, and I would not worry about it happening again in the future. Again, I am sorry that it took some time to locate the cheque, and deposit it for you.”

I’m sorry too because I’m so uneasy about what happened that I haven’t had the nerve to send any more money into Zag. I may in future because I have seen reviews from dozens of other people who have never had a problem but I am not eager to try again.

Luckily, because this was a “test” cheque the amount was not large. It did not put over-draw my chequing account. If it had been a significant sized cheque, though, it could have been a real problem.

Would I Recommend Zag Bank to Others?

No.

Even though I’ve seen testimony from dozens of others that their account was opened easily and is working fine, I would not recommend Zag Bank. It didn’t go well for me so I won’t recommend it.

I’ll admit that I’m not really happy that each time I have had to reach out to Zag Bank to find out what is going on. So far, I have not received any messages from them reaching out to contact me about this missing cheque image.

I may try using Zag Bank myself in the future but I won’t be recommending them. It’s ok if I want to take a chance  with my money but I won’t tell others to do that.

Related Reading

  • How to Open an Account at Zag Bank (or not!)
  • How to Open an Account at EQ Bank

Join In
Are you one of the hundreds (perhaps thousands) that has opened an account with Zag Bank with no problem? Or are you one of the few (or perhaps I’m alone in this?) who has had problems trying to open an account? Please share your views with a comment.

Posted in Finances, Money Tips | Tagged bank accounts, banks, cash, daily interest savings account, EQ Bank, high interest savings account, reviews, savings, Zag bank

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Recent Posts

  • Can I Withdraw Cash from my BMO RRIF Even Though My GIC Has Not Matured?
  • How to Transfer Money from Your BMO Bank Account Into Your InvestorLine Non-Registered Investment Account
  • How to Contribute Cash to a BMO InvestorLIne TFSA from a BMO Bank Account
  • How to Redeem Your IHG Points Before They Expire If You Do Not Have Many
  • Where Should I Buy My RRSP GICs in My Brokerage Account or At a Bank or Credit Union?

Financial Crooks Contents


Bank Accounts

BMO InvestorLine Info

Bonds

Bonuses and Free Stuff

Books

Budgets

Cash

CIBC Investor's Edge Info

CPP

Charity and Helping

Credit Cards

Dividends

Equities

ETFs

Fees

Financial Planning

GICs

GIS

Income

Money Tips

Mortgages

Mutual Funds

OAS

PC Financial Bank Articles

RBC Direct Investing Info

RESPs

Retirement

Reviews

RRSPs

Rules

Savings and Secure Investments

Self Directed Investing

Shares

Simplii Financial Bank Articles

Tangerine Bank Articles

Taxes

TFSAs

More Great Crooks!

Computer Crooks
Helpful Crooks
Natural Crooks
image of thin green double line

© 2012-2021 financialcrooks.com

About Us

Contact Us

Disclaimer

Privacy Policy