Technically and legally speaking the money you hold at a bank is a bank's liability to you, and it's not your "money", you are just the beneficiary of their liability. If you want real money you would have to hold physical gold.yeah banks are getting cheeky now
FFS its my money NOT theirs limits on paying in and taking out via card etc
They would love to make everyone use card so that they know what you spend on and can pester you with ads etc
Don`t get me wrong card is sooo convenient but if i want to withdraw £5000 in bank i expect to be able to,not be subjuect to the spanish inqusition.i.e. why do you want the money,where are you going to spend it etc etc![]()
Of course they accept cash, but if the tills are down, they can't process the transaction regardless of how you pay.Never been in a supermarket that didn't take cash.
Tesco, Sainsbury's, ASDA, Aldi, Lidl and a few more I've been in over the past year all happily accept cash.
I keep a bit of cash around just in case I have to get a tradesman in then I can give him half a crown to buy him and his mate a few beers.
Not had tradesmen in for a while though.
The World remains physical and ultimately cash is resilient, even if the lights go out or rather the computer says no, which they seem to do every now and then. We keep a few hundred quid in the house and I try to keep £20-100 in my wallet.
You’re missing the point @PlacidCasual is making. It doesn’t happen often but there have been occasions when card systems at a supermarket go down and it becomes a cash only system.If it gets to the point that the lights have gone out for any extended length of time, then that cash is going to become as worthless as the plastic your bank card is made of![]()
I almost never use a card.
I have had a card declined before even though i had enough money in the bank.
The account had been locked due to the Bank thinking an earlier transaction was fraud, even though it was not.
Super embarrassing having to phone my Bank in a store in front of a bunch of people.
Never again.
You’re missing the point @PlacidCasual is making. It doesn’t happen often but there have been occasions when card systems at a supermarket go down and it becomes a cash only system.
Also I get many occasions when tradesmen prefer cash - debate the reasons if you wish - and they get it. Means that any time I need a follow up, I’m top of the list.
Normally keep about a one’er in the drawer just in case. My local Indian and Chinese restaurants are a bit cheaper if you pay by cash.
Of course they accept cash, but if the tills are down, they can't process the transaction regardless of how you pay.
Yes. Incase I lose my card(s) I have enough to pay for a weeks shopping and fuel basically enough to cover the period before a new card gets to me. And thats just common sense.Hi all
Do you still keep any cash at home in case of “emergencies”?
Back in the days I would keep a reasonable amount at home in case I couldn’t get to a cash point and needed more cash than I have in my wallet for such things like;
Taxi home,
An unplanned take away,
Birthday/festive gifts,
Buying the odd second hand item locally, going to carboots,
Paying people back,
Cheeky visit to the casino, bookies or even the pub.
Food shop in case I lose my wallet and cards..
It’s just for safety in mind but it seems that i’ve not needed to dip into this pot now for years, as people/shops/services are more willing to take digital transfers more and more and I’m tempted just to bank a large chunk of it and reduce the amount I have “just in case”..
Anyone else have a reasonable amount at home or do people tend to rely on the electronic payment systems now?
Yes. Incase I lose my card(s) I have enough to pay for a weeks shopping and fuel basically enough to cover the period before a new card gets to me. And thats just common sense.
Happened a few times here in Hampshire at big supermarkets. Big powercut 1st time. Couldn't buy anything. 2nd time tills were down due to network issue or something, weren't accepting any transactions.I've literally never experienced that in my life, I've had card readers be down but never the tills themselves.