Your Small Business
Toolkits
Printing and Shipping
Take advantage of the Printing & Shipping Toolkit sponsored by FedEx to help grow your business.
Float is the difference between the amount of checks written and deposited according to your own books or records, and the amount of those checks or deposits that have cleared your bank account. The following example should help you understand float.
|
Float is the product of the check-clearing procedures of your bank and the Federal Reserve. Its significance in an age of automated fund transfers, debit cards, electronic fund transfer has been significantly reduced. When it used to take up to a week or more for a check to clear due to manual processing, it was a more important factor. Today, the only way to ensure that there is float is by mailing checks instead of using an electronic payment method, thereby guaranteeing that it will be at least a day or to before the check is received.
Many businesses neglect to consider the shortened float when they find themselves temporarily short of cash. There is one important rule to follow when using float you must have the necessary cash inflows to cover the checks written before they clear your checking account.
|
Keep in mind that float is a two-way street, so to speak. If you write checks that clear your bank faster than your deposits clear, you'll create a negative float. The key to making what's left of float work in your favor is to accelerate your cash inflows and delay your cash outflows.
Joining the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is an easy choice to make and an investment that begins to pay off right away.