I guess I'll be the lone voice in the wilderness. We've been perfectly happy with Zelle.
We use it a couple times a month to pay service providers, send money to family. Never had any issues with it, don't need an "app" for it, works with our normal bank stuff.
Similarly, at the same time, we got a check recently from a settlement. We plonked it into our account, and it bounced. It was a large settlement (i.e. lots of people), and the law firm in charge of writing the checks messed up, and thus canceled all of checks and re-issued them a couple weeks later. It was a big deal. Stuff happens.
Hopefully BofA owns up and refunds all of the overdraft problems, but they can't roll it all back. Bouncing checks have repercussions out of the banks control (landlords tend to frown on bounced checks, for example), which behooves them to be more diligent about things like this that can impact that.
The big problem is that people are out of the loop for things like this. Computer pulls the money back, computer bounces the check, computer notes the bounced check, computer tells the other computer you bounced a check, computer craters your credit rating. There are no "people" involved in this, it's all procedures and rules and such encoding is the "logic" of one of the most inscrutable creations man has ever created -- the computer. And people have to scurry about to compensate for the vast ripple effects these things can have that impact peoples lives.
So, hopefully BofA cleans up their end, but more importantly, hopefully everyone down stream is patient with those affected and helps them recover as well. And, finally, no doubt a legion of scammers will crawl out of the wood work leveraging this event to gain some advantage. Way of the world.
You are happy because you have not seen how much better things can be. Zelle is very poorly designed. It is possible to send money to numbers which do not exist. Even if the number does exist, you have no way of knowing whether the person you are sending to is correct or not, since you enter their name information yourself, instead of zelle fetching this and asking you to confirm it.
how does the recipient of a zelle transaction know if it’s tax worthy (aka needs to go on 1099) or just sending money to family? i don’t see a way to “tag”/“flag” transactions
> Zelle® does not impose taxes on transactions made on its network. If payments you receive on the Zelle Network® are taxable, it is your responsibility to report them to the IRS. If you have any questions about your tax obligations, please consult with a tax professional.
We use it a couple times a month to pay service providers, send money to family. Never had any issues with it, don't need an "app" for it, works with our normal bank stuff.
Similarly, at the same time, we got a check recently from a settlement. We plonked it into our account, and it bounced. It was a large settlement (i.e. lots of people), and the law firm in charge of writing the checks messed up, and thus canceled all of checks and re-issued them a couple weeks later. It was a big deal. Stuff happens.
Hopefully BofA owns up and refunds all of the overdraft problems, but they can't roll it all back. Bouncing checks have repercussions out of the banks control (landlords tend to frown on bounced checks, for example), which behooves them to be more diligent about things like this that can impact that.
The big problem is that people are out of the loop for things like this. Computer pulls the money back, computer bounces the check, computer notes the bounced check, computer tells the other computer you bounced a check, computer craters your credit rating. There are no "people" involved in this, it's all procedures and rules and such encoding is the "logic" of one of the most inscrutable creations man has ever created -- the computer. And people have to scurry about to compensate for the vast ripple effects these things can have that impact peoples lives.
So, hopefully BofA cleans up their end, but more importantly, hopefully everyone down stream is patient with those affected and helps them recover as well. And, finally, no doubt a legion of scammers will crawl out of the wood work leveraging this event to gain some advantage. Way of the world.