| Author |
Replies: 40 / Views: 11,415 |
|
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
1510 Posts |
He did that so he wouldnt get yelled at or fired.... Quote: the guy had to ask his boss if he "should" take them...what kind of crap is that? personally the guy that payed his last mortgage payment is pennies is an idiot  --he just made the bank tellers job a nightmare
Retired USAF 1983-2003
Edited by Coinstar 07/19/2012 09:54 am
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
I've had this happen to me at work (with both pennies and quarters). My answer: "Here are some wrappers. I'll be happy to help you when you can pay without holding up all these people behind you." I'm happy to accept wrapped coin in any amount.
Don't be a jerk--roll your coin. And, if you're trying to spend a dump instead of just, well, dumping it, don't try to do it all at once. I've handed out up to $2 (in pennies) and $15 (in dimes) in wrappers, and most people seem glad to take in those small amounts.
. . . . of course, I'm also at an advantage because I can take ten bucks' worth of pennies to work, swap 'em out for a $10 bill, and not get in trouble for it, so take that with a grain of salt. I do most of my dumping that way (actually wondering if I'd freak out our assistant manager if I finished rewrapping my current box of $25 and took it in tonight to swap out with the $25 we just got--dump AND more to search, bonus!).
|
|
Bedrock of the Community
13014 Posts |
Quote: actually wondering if I'd freak out our assistant manager if I finished rewrapping my current box of $25 and took it in tonight to swap out with the $25 we just got--dump AND more to search, bonus!.
Depending on what type of manager you have if you explained your intentions and asked first they may not care at all and let you do that from now on
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
881 Posts |
My small town Postmaster liked being paid in rolled coins - it saved her a trip to the bank. I would ask if she wanted them for payment and she would take them, then I would show her my excess rolled coins and she would "buy" what she needed.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
538 Posts |
I always feel bad when I'm broke and starving and spend $3 in quarters at McDonalds. I can't imagine how embarrassed I would feel trying to do that with pennies.
|
|
Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12804 Posts |
Quote: Don't be a jerk--roll your coin. It's kinda funny.... I thought once that that was the only way I could take my change back to the bank for deposit. Well, I bank with BoA and they don't take rolled change any more. 10 years ago or so I took about 2-300 bucks of rolled change in to my branch. Great. It took me another 5 years to accumulate that much from regular spending and the next time I took it in all nicely rolled (after a few hours in front of the TV with coin wrappers and a bottle or 4 of wine), they told me politely that I needed to break all the rolls into a large heavy-duty plastic bag that they would seal up and ship off to San Antonio to be counted. It didn't take nearly as long to break the rolls as it took to wrap them, obviously, but sheesh. What a lot of wasted effort. Now I know. And any time I go to the bank I ask for one of those bags so I can easily throw my CRH rejects and pocket change into them. Moral - check with your bank to see if they don't accept rolled change before you spend time rolling. I suspect it's the larger guys that don't take rolled stuff.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
996 Posts |
The problem with paying with rolled coin is that there is no way to easily know that the roll contains the correct amount of the correct coin unless it is broken and counted. Even plastic see-thru rolls have been found that contain slugs or are short a couple nickles.
I was sent to the bank years ago when I worked in retail and one of the rolls of quarters contained a piece of pipe sandwiched between a few quarters on either end of the roll. So for $1.50 and a piece of pipe some one made off with $10 someplace down the line.
The idea about paying the last mortgage payment in pennies is not to be a jerk but to symbolize an achievement. Many banks, especially in small towns where the local bank may still hold a mortgage (kind of rare these days...) would relish the event and make a ceremony out of it. Try this at one of those huge, faceless corporations that hold most of the mortgages these days however and you are right back at the "cause a scene" situations.
|
|
Valued Member
United States
89 Posts |
I just roll hunted my first box of pennies. Afterwards, I wasnt really sure what to do with the ones I didnt want to keep. Taking a 8.9% haircut or whatever other fee someone would place seems a bit ridiculous. In searching for alternatives, I was at Woodman's Foods and saw the self checkout had a funnel for payment of change. Today was the test run and I successfully paid with about 140 pennies (and the rest with cash). It took a minute or two for it to process but there were no other issues. I tested it for small amounts (up to 20 cents) and the counter appeared accurate. Paying for anything more than $2 with pennies would probably be conspicuously long.
I still dont know where I'll get rid of halves if I ever roll hunt those...
|
|
Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12804 Posts |
Your bank should accept them. Or some of the Coinstar kiosks will not charge you a fee if you select store credit or certain vendors (Amazon, etc.) instead.
|
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
1227 Posts |
Gerrod, try your local gas station! My station is full of coin hunters, and we all look for different things. I wouldn't advise trying to pay with a hundred bucks in halves, but as long as you have a nicely wrapped roll, or can count your coin out QUICKLY (the number of people I have to count for because they apparently can't handle multiples of five, YEESH), your local station should have no problem accepting your coin in small amounts. I've taken payments of up to $32 in dollar coins and halves for gas and snacks. That particular gentleman had a great system: Showed me which kind of coin he was using (he paid with his dollars first, then halves), then quickly stacked them out: "One-two-three-four-five, one-two-three-four-ten, one-two-three-four-fifteen." (The $2 at the end was a single stack of halves.) All I had to do was sweep up the coins and dump 'em in my alternate-change slot.
|
| |
Replies: 40 / Views: 11,415 |