When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Deposit slip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deposit_slip

    The description column on deposit slips has been used for over 100 years in the U.S. to notate where the bank should send the check to reclaim the money; this was done at first by notating in words the name of bank or its location. [9] The bank's transit number, also called bank number, began to be used instead of words.

  3. Health savings account - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_savings_account

    Investments in a health savings account can be directed by the individual. While a typical health savings account custodian may offer investments such as certificates of deposit, stocks, bonds, or mutual funds, certain financial institutions provide accounts offering alternative investments which can be made inside the health savings account.

  4. FSA debit card - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FSA_debit_card

    An example of a Flexible spending account debit card with info edited out. All such cards to date bear the Visa , MasterCard , or Discover brand and operate through their main networks; thus all FSA debit card transactions are of the offline variety (also known as "signature debit" or, inaccurately but commonly, "credit").

  5. HealthEquity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HealthEquity

    HealthEquity, Inc. is an American financial technology and business services company that is designated as a non-bank health savings trustee by the IRS. [2] This designation allows HealthEquity to be the custodian of health savings accounts regardless of which financial institution the funds are deposited with.

  6. American Fidelity Assurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Fidelity_Assurance

    American Fidelity Assurance (AFA) is an American private, family-owned life and health insurance company co-founded by C.W. and C.B. Cameron. It provides voluntary supplemental health insurance products (cancer, disability, life, and hospital indemnity) and tax-deferred annuities to education employees, auto dealerships, health care providers, and municipal workers across the United States.

  7. Pension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pension

    Other vehicles (certain lottery payouts, for example, or an annuity) may provide a similar stream of payments. The common use of the term pension is to describe the payments a person receives upon retirement, usually under predetermined legal or contractual terms. A recipient of a retirement pension is known as a pensioner or retiree.

  8. I’m a Bank Teller: 8 Biggest Money Deposit Mistakes I See ...

    www.aol.com/finance/m-bank-teller-8-biggest...

    Bank tellers reveal the most common money deposit mistakes, from unendorsed checks to missed receipts. Avoid these errors to protect your finances. I’m a Bank Teller: 8 Biggest Money Deposit ...

  9. Free File - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_File

    Free File Fillable Forms is an electronic version of IRS paper forms. Free File Fillable Forms does not include any elaborate cross-checking or question-and-answer formats (such as is found in many of the Free File Software packages), instead it is a simple fill-in-the blank format (however, it does perform math calculations).