
ANSI standards. Security considerations. Check Payment Systems Association requirements. Positive Pay and Payee Positive Pay specifications. Designing a check that meets industry and regulatory requirements as well as corporate branding and processing requirements is no small challenge. And recent Check 21 legislation only has added to the complexity.
Imaged Documents Pose New Challenges
Though no additional check design standards were mandated as a result of Check 21, legibility has become more important than ever. Original checks now may be truncated and imaged to create negotiable instruments, called substitute checks or image replacement documents (IRDs). So financial institutions and their customers need to take a long, hard look at background reflectance, clutter and contrast where vital check data is located to assure readability of the images and the resulting IRDs.
What’s more, as banking institutions have begun imaging checks, they have also become concerned with the file size of these imaged documents. Many are setting file size limits to minimize storage requirements and their related expenses.
How would your checks fare in a critical examination? Are they legible, compliant and designed for trouble-free processing? Now is the time to revisit what you’re doing. For the bank of first deposit, it’s an issue of processing productivity, cost and meeting Regulation CC requirements that govern the availability of funds and returned checks. For commercial customers, it is a matter of avoiding unnecessary bank charges.
Melissa Barnes, project engineer on Standard Register’s Materials Testing & Quality Control team and member of the American National Standards Institute committee (formerly ANSI, now ASC X9B) that establishes check standards for the financial services industry, offers this list of common check design errors to help you evaluate your own check program:
Be sure to use the positive image of the padlock icon; the reverse image of the padlock icon is no longer allowed.
A Dynamic Environment
Check standards are dynamic, always changing to keep up with technology and legislation inside and outside the US. In fact, Canada recently established its own standards for check stock. So companies wanting to conduct business with Canadian firms will need to examine their current check program.
Ms. Barnes recommends that before companies place a re-order for checks, they have their check designs reviewed to ensure they are in step with changing requirements.
For further information about check design and other compliance issues, contact Standard Register. Our document security professionals can work with you in designing documents to meet global industry and regulatory requirements and help mitigate your risks.