I do nearly all my transactions with my debit card. I rarely carry cash. Lately I've been forced to keep cash on hand because my card is ancient. I'm a girl and I can't stand carrying around a purse, so I keep my driver's license, debit card, and other important cards in my pocket. I know I should find a slimline wallet to carry them in, but I hadn't thought about it till recently. The cards rub against each other, and thus are now very weird about being swiped. This wouldn't be a problem if a few places around here are now no longer allowed to do manual entry on debit/credit cards.
Before I got married, I was on a joint account with my dad. He would pay my bills for me out of our joint account while I was out on the road. Now I'm driving but home every day and can take care of my own bills, so he turned over his card to me. I got the PIN from him and have been starting to use it, keeping that card somewhere where it won't get messed up. I haven't had any problems so far, but I've only been doing this a week. I'll use it as debit if possible since I have the PIN, but some places only run it as credit, and this is my concern.
I hand the card over to the cashier and tell them up front, "This is my dad's card but we're on the same account. Mine is messed up." I have my card with me ready to show (the cards look identical except for the number and name), and my checkbook with both names on it, and of course my driver's license. I keep it ready, but no one so far has been very concerned about investigating to make sure I truly am authorized on the account. However, I know one of these days someone is going to want me to prove my identity and connection to the name on the card, and I was just curious how best to handle it when the time arises. Should I keep doing what I'm doing, and be prepared to prove myself, or should I just say, "Okay, here's my ratty old card, good luck getting it to scan, you should be prepared for a manual entry if you can do so." I get the feeling that I raise more suspicion warning them in advance about my card than by just handing over a card with a male name on it. I don't want to appear suspicious, but I don't want to make things too difficult for the cashier, thus making myself to be an SC.
Before I got married, I was on a joint account with my dad. He would pay my bills for me out of our joint account while I was out on the road. Now I'm driving but home every day and can take care of my own bills, so he turned over his card to me. I got the PIN from him and have been starting to use it, keeping that card somewhere where it won't get messed up. I haven't had any problems so far, but I've only been doing this a week. I'll use it as debit if possible since I have the PIN, but some places only run it as credit, and this is my concern.
I hand the card over to the cashier and tell them up front, "This is my dad's card but we're on the same account. Mine is messed up." I have my card with me ready to show (the cards look identical except for the number and name), and my checkbook with both names on it, and of course my driver's license. I keep it ready, but no one so far has been very concerned about investigating to make sure I truly am authorized on the account. However, I know one of these days someone is going to want me to prove my identity and connection to the name on the card, and I was just curious how best to handle it when the time arises. Should I keep doing what I'm doing, and be prepared to prove myself, or should I just say, "Okay, here's my ratty old card, good luck getting it to scan, you should be prepared for a manual entry if you can do so." I get the feeling that I raise more suspicion warning them in advance about my card than by just handing over a card with a male name on it. I don't want to appear suspicious, but I don't want to make things too difficult for the cashier, thus making myself to be an SC.
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