Then i fail to see the avantage of ING. In fact, i prefer to bank in person, not by phoneI've been with ING for several years, and very pleased with them. You have to maintain an account with a "normal" bricks-and-mortar bank as well, however, and the two will be linked. You can't cash paper cheques at ING, because the whole point of it is that it is a savings bank in the ether. You do everything by phone, which means transferring money in and out, via your "normal" bank.
They do have a couple of ATMS around town, I believe, where you could deposit and withdraw funds. Like a handful. ING is basically a place to park money, at a better interest rate, than a regular bank. Of course, rates these days are insignificant, so that argument doesn't count for much.
But I can cash checks at my bank, BMO.ing direct has a checking account called thrive its fabulous. so no you don't have to have another brick and motor bank anymore. and yes you can cash checks with ing direct since they added the thrive checking account.
No Fees.So what does ING offer than makes them better than BMO? Nothing worth speaking of
that i can see in this thread.
I personally think ING is fantastic. I've had savings and investment accounts with them for years, then when the Thrive Checking came out, they invited me and others to give it a try. I didn't really start using it as my main checking account until about 8 months ago. You just make all of your deposits at the ATM. You would deposit a check the same as you would cash. Once you begin depositing money, they will continue to review your account and move you up tiers so you can deposit up to $5000 per week without it being held for 5 days. The phone lines to speak to someone about your account is open 24 hours. They provide 'whoops protection' of up to $240 - kind of like an over draft for payments. If you refer people, they give you $25 in your account and put $25-$50 in their account. They send you a couple of books of free checks. I cancelled my other accounts and I only use ING. Great bank.Anyone banking with this company? is it any good? Should I switch from TD/RBC? if its all online how do I cash a paper cheque? Thanx.
I use PC Financial for daily banking, you get access to CIBC ATM's, the account is free, you get free cheques, the online banking is featureful and excellent, and their customer service is top notch. I also use them for my mortgage, as they had the best rate at the time. Their savings accounts, though, have sub-par interest rates. The only thing I pay for is EMT, everything else is free.Anyone have good or bad things to say about the banks/trust companies in this link?
http://www.highinterestsavings.ca/chart/
Sold my place, going to park the funds and rent for 3-4 years.
Which ATM machines would you use to make a deposit? I don't think ING have their own ATM machines.I personally think ING is fantastic. I've had savings and investment accounts with them for years, then when the Thrive Checking came out, they invited me and others to give it a try. I didn't really start using it as my main checking account until about 8 months ago. You just make all of your deposits at the ATM. You would deposit a check the same as you would cash. Once you begin depositing money, they will continue to review your account and move you up tiers so you can deposit up to $5000 per week without it being held for 5 days. The phone lines to speak to someone about your account is open 24 hours. They provide 'whoops protection' of up to $240 - kind of like an over draft for payments. If you refer people, they give you $25 in your account and put $25-$50 in their account. They send you a couple of books of free checks. I cancelled my other accounts and I only use ING. Great bank.
Kayla
They do, just not that many. They have an ATM locator on their website, you can see if any are convenient to you. However I find the combination of PC Financial for daily banking (CIBC machines) plus a completely virtual outfit for savings (e.g. Outlook financial) better.Which ATM machines would you use to make a deposit? I don't think ING have their own ATM machines.
The first $100k of your money is guaranteed by the Canadian government when it is in a savings account at any of those institutions.jiiimmm said:One concern I've had recently is that since ING is European, how solid is it in terms of exposure to the fiasco in Europe? Any financial experts with thoughts on this?