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Online bill paying: How to get started

For some computer users, paying bills online is as natural as using e-mail instead of writing a letter: it's quicker, easier and best of all, free. For others, bill payment represents the final frontier of the Internet: Can I trust a computer program to keep my good credit clean, or should I just stick with writing checks and licking stamps?

If you're tired of licking stamps and ready to cross the border into electronic bill payment, you'll be happy to learn that it has never been easier.

Today, more and more brick-to-click and virtual banks are offering it free as an online service; others require a certain account minimum or charge a nominal fee, in part to defray the cost of a third-party e-payment provider.

Getting started
Getting started is easy. On your private banking site, you'll find guides to walk you through the steps of how to register the accounts you wish to pay from and payee accounts you wish to pay to. You only need to enter the account information once; your private banking site will keep those accounts available until you remove them. You can always change the accounts from which you wish to pay your bills and add more payees as needed.

U.S. banks often limit the scope of online bill payment to the United States, and may for legal reasons prohibit certain types of payments, including court-ordered payments and federal and state tax payments.

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At the account registration stage, you also may be given the opportunity to receive some of your bills online, either via e-mail, through your private banking site, or both. An increasing number of larger companies now offer electronic billing, or e-bills, and accept electronic payment.

Scheduling payments
Once you have registered the accounts you wish to pay online, the next step is to schedule payment. You simply select the account you wish to pay from, the payee account you wish to pay to, the amount you wish to pay and the date you want the payee to receive the payment.

Your bank may set a minimum number of days, often four or five, as the earliest available payment date. You may also have the option to schedule recurring payments, make multiple payments at once, and automatically pay e-bills.

Your creditors receive your online payment in one of two ways: electronic payment or check. If the payee is set up to accept electronic payments, your payment is automatically debited from the account you select and deposited electronically into their account, just as if you had written a check. If the payee cannot accept electronic payments, and most businesses cannot, they will be issued a check based on your online payment instructions, hence your bank's 4-5 day grace period.

Banks often contract with third-party providers to fulfill this online payment function. These same service providers often work with the payees as well, particularly large corporations, municipalities and utilities, to provide e-billing and other cost-saving online features.

Tracking your payments
Naturally, you want to make sure your online bill payments get processed correctly and on time. Most bill payment sites include a payment activity page that lists all of your payments and their status -- scheduled, pending or processed. Remember, in addition to the four- or five-day delivery time on your bank's end, it could take several days for your creditor to apply the payment to your account.

For peace of mind, you may want to request that your bank send an alert to your e-mail, wireless device or private banking site when a payment clears.

Warning!
Companies sometimes change the billing address or your account number without warning. It's important to check your statement each month to verify those details as well as your transactions. If the billing address changes, you could easily be hit with late fees even though your third party service made the payment in a timely manner. You may receive verification from your third party service that payment has been made -- but it may go to the wrong place or be credited to the wrong account.

As with account transfers, you may want to print the transaction-completed or receipt page when you pay your bills online as a reminder to make sure they post on your private banking site or in your next statement.

In the future, online bill payment will likely enable you to view and pay your bills at your bank's automated teller machine and from mobile Internet-enabled devices such as your PDA or cellular phone.

-- Posted: Dec. 1, 2004
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