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Jun 16, 2026

Types of Checks: Every Check Type and Term Explained

Most people know what a check looks like. Fewer know the difference between a certified check and a cashier check, why a voided check is used to set up direct deposit, what a counter check is, or why the written dollar amount on a check legally overrides the numeric amount if they conflict. This guide covers all the types of checks used in personal and business banking, every part of a check and what it does, and which check formats are right for different situations. If you order checks online or write them regularly, understanding this terminology saves time and prevents costly mistakes.

 

Every Part of a Check Explained

Before covering the types of checks, it helps to understand what every field on a check does. Each element has a specific function, and filling in any of them incorrectly can cause a check to bounce, be rejected, or be returned.

 

Payer Information (Top Left)

The account holder's name and address appear in the upper-left corner. On a personal check, this is the individual's name and home address. On a business check, this is the legal business name and business address. The name must match the name registered on the bank account. If you form an LLC and pay someone from a personal check, the name mismatch creates a paper trail problem your accountant and the IRS may flag.

 

Check Number (Top Right)

A sequential number that identifies each individual check. It appears in two places: the top-right corner of the check face and in the MICR line at the bottom of the check. These two numbers should always match. If they do not, it is a strong indicator the check has been altered or counterfeited. Banks will flag this discrepancy during processing.

 

Fractional Routing Number (Top Right, Below Check Number)

This is the field almost no guide explains, yet it appears on every check printed in the US. It looks like a fraction, formatted as PP-YYYY/XXXX. The numerator identifies the bank's ABA institution code and Federal Reserve district; the denominator represents the routing symbol. It was created for manual check processing before the MICR system existed and still functions as a backup today. If the MICR line at the bottom of a check is damaged, torn, or unreadable, bank tellers and processing centers use the fractional routing number to manually route the check to the correct institution. Checkomatic prints this correctly on every check order because it is a required element of ABA-compliant check stock.

 

Date Line (Top Right)

The date the check is written. Checks are generally valid for six months from this date. After that, they become stale-dated and most banks will refuse to process them. Writing a future date on a check (post-dating) does not legally prevent a bank from cashing it early in most US states, though many banks will attempt to honor the date. If you need to delay a payment, stopping payment on a check is more reliable than post-dating it.

 

Payee Line ("Pay to the Order of")

The name of the person, business, or organization being paid. The payee must endorse the check on the back before depositing or cashing it. Writing "Cash" in this field makes the check payable to anyone who holds it, which eliminates the security of named-payee checks. Avoid leaving the payee line blank entirely; a blank payee line is essentially a signed blank check.

 

Dollar Box (Numeric Amount)

The payment amount written in numbers, placed in the small box immediately to the right of the payee line. The dollar amount should be written as close to the dollar sign as possible to prevent anyone from inserting additional digits before the number.

 

Written Amount Line

The same dollar amount written out in words on the line below the payee field. This is the legally binding amount if the written and numeric amounts differ. Courts and banks default to the written amount in the event of a conflict. If you write "$150" in the dollar box but "one hundred dollars" on the written line, the check legally authorizes payment of $100. Always verify both fields match before signing.

 

Memo Line

An optional field for notes. It has no effect on how the check is processed or whether it clears. Common uses include noting an invoice number, account number, pay period, or purpose of payment. Some payees, such as utility companies, specifically request that you include your account number in the memo field so they can apply the payment correctly. On business checks with voucher stubs, detailed payment notes go on the stubs rather than the memo line.

 

Signature Line (Bottom Right)

The account holder's signature authorizes the bank to release the funds. Without a valid signature, a check is not valid and the bank should not pay it. The signature should match the signature on file with the bank. Never sign a blank check and never sign a check before filling in all other fields.

 

The MICR Line (Bottom of Check)

The row of numbers and symbols printed in magnetic ink at the very bottom of every check. MICR stands for Magnetic Ink Character Recognition. The system was developed by Stanford Research Institute and General Electric and adopted as the US banking standard in 1958. Modern check-sorting equipment reads the MICR line magnetically at speeds exceeding 2,400 checks per minute. The line contains three elements in order from left to right:

 

  • ABA Routing Number: Nine digits that identify the bank. Printed between two transit symbols (the ⑆ character). Every bank in the US has a unique routing number assigned by the American Bankers Association.
  • Account Number: Identifies the specific checking account. Length varies by institution. Printed between transit and on-us symbols.
  • Check Number: Matches the check number printed in the top-right corner. If these two numbers differ, the check has been tampered with.

 

Business checks on full letter-size stock also include an optional auxiliary on-us field at the far left of the MICR line. Under NACHA rules, the presence of this field makes the check ineligible for ACH conversion, preventing vendors from converting your payment to an electronic debit without your explicit consent.

 

Personal Check Types

Standard Personal Checks

The most common form of check, drawn against a personal checking account. Personal checks are printed with the account holder's name, address, routing number, and account number. They come in checkbooks of 25 to 50 checks and measure approximately 6 inches wide by 2.75 inches tall. The bank does not guarantee payment; if the account has insufficient funds when the check is presented, it bounces and both parties face fees.

Checkomatic offers personal checkbooks in four background styles with free black-and-white logo printing on every order. Standard shipping runs 3 to 5 business days.

 

Duplicate Personal Checks

Duplicate checks include a thin carbonless copy behind each check in the book. When you press down to fill in a check, the copy automatically records everything you wrote. You tear out the original and the duplicate stays in the book as a permanent record of every payment. This is especially useful for people who pay recurring bills by check or want a paper record without entering every transaction into a register. Checkomatic's personal checkbooks are available in both single and duplicate formats.

 

Personal Laser Checks (QuickBooks Wallet Format)

Wallet-sized personal checks designed to print through QuickBooks and compatible accounting software. They are the same physical dimensions as a standard personal check but formatted for laser or inkjet printing rather than handwriting. Owner-operators and sole proprietors who manage finances through QuickBooks but want a portable, personal-sized check use this format. Checkomatic carries QuickBooks wallet personal checks compatible with all current versions of QuickBooks.

 

Personal Deskset Checks

Three checks per page with a side stub on each check for quick transaction notes. The pages fit into a 7-ring binder for organized desk filing. This format is popular with individuals who write checks frequently and want a more professional-looking format than a standard wallet checkbook. Checkomatic's personal deskset checks come in multiple colors and include free logo printing.

 

Top Stub Personal Checks

A spiral-bound format with a record stub above each check rather than a side stub. The stub stays attached after you tear out the check, giving you a running record of each payment. Good for individuals who want checkbook-style portability with built-in recordkeeping. Available at Checkomatic's personal top stub check page.

 

Secretary Deskbook Checks

Three checks per page at 6 x 2.75 inches each, in a compact deskbook format with a built-in transaction register. Smaller than a full business check page, larger than a standard wallet checkbook. A good middle-ground format for individuals who write checks frequently and want to keep them organized at a desk without a full business check setup. Available from Checkomatic's secretary deskbook product page.

 

Guaranteed Payment Checks: Cashier Checks and Certified Checks

Personal and business checks depend on the account holder having sufficient funds when the check is presented. Cashier checks and certified checks remove that uncertainty for the payee. Both are appropriate for large transactions where the recipient needs assurance that the payment will clear.

 

Cashier Checks

A cashier check is issued by the bank and drawn directly from the bank's own funds. When you request one, your account is debited immediately and the bank takes responsibility for the payment. The check is signed by a bank representative rather than by you. Because the bank is the payer, the check cannot bounce. Cashier checks are commonly required for real estate closings, vehicle purchases, large contractor payments, or any situation where the payee does not know you well enough to trust a personal check for a high-value transaction. Banks typically charge a fee of $10 to $15 for cashier checks.

 

Certified Checks

A certified check is your own personal check, but the bank has verified that the funds exist and set them aside in your account. The bank stamps or marks the check to confirm certification. Unlike a cashier check, the funds remain in your account; they are simply earmarked and unavailable for any other purpose until the check clears. You sign the check, not the bank. Certified checks provide the same guarantee against bouncing as cashier checks, but the bank's direct liability is lower since the payment comes from your account rather than the bank's. Both types are considered substantially more secure than standard personal checks for the payee.

 

The Fraud Risk With Cashier Checks

Cashier check fraud is common specifically because the checks look so trustworthy. Counterfeit cashier checks are used in overpayment scams where a buyer sends a cashier check for more than the purchase price and asks the seller to wire back the difference. The check looks real, your bank may initially credit the funds, but when the check bounces days later you are responsible for the full amount you wired. If you receive a cashier check from someone you do not know for more than the agreed amount, do not release goods or wire money until your bank explicitly confirms the funds have fully cleared, not just been provisionally credited.

 

Business Check Types

Standard Business Checks

Any check drawn from a business checking account in the name of a legal business entity. Business checks display the company name, business address, and often a logo. They come in several format types (covered in the next section) and are compatible with accounting software like QuickBooks, Sage, and Quicken. Unlike personal checks, they include an auxiliary on-us field in the MICR line that prevents ACH conversion under NACHA rules.

 

Payroll Checks

Business checks used specifically to pay employees. They follow the check-on-top voucher format, with the check at the top of the page and detailed pay stubs below. The stubs carry gross pay, itemized deductions (federal tax, state tax, Social Security, Medicare, benefits), and net pay. One stub goes to the employee as their earnings record; one stays in the employer's records. Checkomatic's payroll business checks are available in manual format for businesses that write payroll by hand.

 

Accounts Payable Checks

Used to pay vendors, suppliers, and contractors. These follow the same voucher format as payroll checks but the stub fields are for invoice numbers, purchase order numbers, payment terms, and vendor account references rather than earnings and deductions. The structured recordkeeping reduces the chance of paying the same invoice twice. Checkomatic offers accounts payable business checks in both manual and computer-print formats.

 

Blank Business Checks

Check stock with no pre-printed bank account information. All check data, including the MICR line with routing and account numbers, is printed in-house using MICR toner on a compatible laser printer. Blank checks are used by businesses with multiple bank accounts (each account needs different MICR data), companies using payroll software that prints banking information directly, or operations that need custom check layouts their software handles. Checkomatic's blank checks are available in check-on-top, check-in-middle, check-on-bottom, and 3-on-a-page formats.

 

Counter Checks

A type of check almost no guide covers in any useful depth. Counter checks are temporary checks issued by a bank teller at the branch counter when a customer needs checks immediately and their printed checks have not arrived yet. They are printed on-demand with minimal information: usually just the routing number, account number, and a basic check layout. Counter checks do not carry your name or address pre-printed on them. Some payees will not accept counter checks because the lack of pre-printed personal information makes them look less legitimate. They are not a substitute for properly printed checks; they are a bridge solution when you urgently need to make a payment.

 

Business Check Formats Explained

Understanding the types of checks for businesses also means understanding the different physical formats. Choosing the wrong format means misaligned printing in your accounting software, which makes every printed check unusable.

 

Check-on-Top (Voucher Check)

The most widely used business check format. The check occupies the top third of an 8.5 x 11-inch page. Two detachable voucher stubs sit below it. Compatible with QuickBooks, Quicken, Rent Manager, and most mainstream accounting platforms. The right choice for payroll and accounts payable when you need a paper record attached to every payment. Checkomatic's check-on-top business checks are available with full ABA-compliant security features.

 

Check-in-Middle

One voucher stub above the check, one below. Used by Peachtree/Sage 50, Softpro, Landtech, and other title company or legal software platforms. QuickBooks does not support this format. If your accounting software is Sage 50 or similar, this is typically your required format. Available from Checkomatic's check-in-middle product page.

 

Check-on-Bottom

Two voucher stubs above the check, which sits at the bottom of the page. Used by certain AP automation systems and older accounting platforms. Less common than check-on-top but available from Checkomatic's check-on-bottom product page.

 

3-on-a-Page Checks

Three checks per letter-size sheet with no attached voucher stubs. Each check is 3.5 inches tall. No recordkeeping stub comes with each check, so payment details must be tracked in software or separately. This format costs less per check than voucher styles. It is commonly used by non-profits, schools, foundations, and small businesses that track payment details entirely in their accounting software and do not need a physical stub per check. Compatible with QuickBooks, Quicken, and Microsoft Money. Checkomatic's 3-on-a-page checks include free logo printing.

 

Continuous Checks

Connected sheets of checks in a perforated strip format designed for dot-matrix or pin-feed printers. The continuous strip feeds through the printer automatically, allowing high-volume batch printing without reloading individual sheets. This format was common in earlier business computing and remains in use in industries that still run legacy dot-matrix printer setups, particularly in manufacturing, distribution, and some government-adjacent operations. They are compatible with QuickBooks, Sage 50, Peachtree, and other software platforms that support continuous forms. Checkomatic can discuss continuous check availability for specific software compatibility needs.

 

Manual Business Checks (Handwritten)

Three-to-a-page handwritten checks with carbonless duplicate copies behind each check. The carbon copy auto-records every payment you write, creating an instant paper trail without any software. Manual business checks work for small businesses, contractors, property managers, or any operation that prefers handwritten payments over software-generated ones. Checkomatic carries manual business checks in accounts payable, payroll, multi-purpose, pocket, and executive deskbook formats.

 

Special and Situational Check Types

Voided Checks

A voided check is a standard personal or business check with the word "VOID" written in large letters across the front. This prevents the check from being used as a payment. The MICR line at the bottom remains intact and readable, which is the entire point. Voided checks are used to provide banking information when setting up direct deposit with an employer, authorizing ACH payments, configuring payroll software, or linking a bank account to a payment platform. The routing number and account number visible in the MICR line are what the other party actually needs, and the VOID marking ensures the check cannot be submitted for payment. Never send a voided check by email as an unprotected attachment; the routing and account numbers in the MICR line are enough for someone to attempt unauthorized ACH debits from your account.

 

eChecks (Electronic Checks)

An eCheck is the digital equivalent of a paper check. The payer authorizes a payment by providing their routing number and account number through a secure online form, and the transaction is processed through the ACH network. eChecks clear faster than paper checks, typically within one to three business days. They are commonly used for online bill payment, subscription services, rent platforms, and B2B transactions. The underlying security depends on the platform handling the transaction; unlike paper checks, there is no physical document with MICR ink and security paper features.

 

Traveler Checks

Pre-printed checks in fixed denominations sold by banks and financial institutions for use while traveling. The buyer signs each check at purchase; the merchant witnesses a second signature at the time of use and verifies they match. If lost or stolen, traveler checks can be replaced. Their use has declined significantly with the widespread adoption of debit cards and multi-currency credit cards, but they remain accepted at many hotels and financial institutions abroad.

 

Post-Dated Checks

A check written with a future date. The intent is that the payee will not deposit or cash the check until the date written on it. However, banks in most US states can legally process a post-dated check before the written date unless the account holder has specifically notified the bank in advance. If you need to delay a payment, a formal stop payment order is more reliable than post-dating. For payees: if you receive a post-dated check, do not attempt to deposit it early without the payer's explicit consent; doing so can damage the business relationship and may trigger legal complications if the account has insufficient funds on the early deposit date.

 

Stale Checks

Any check presented for payment more than six months after the date written on it. Banks are generally not required to honor stale checks, though they may choose to at their discretion. If you find an old check you have not cashed, contact the issuer before depositing it. Government checks, including IRS refund checks, often have their own stated validity periods printed directly on the check. Payroll checks from employers typically expire sooner than six months per company policy.

 

Money Orders

Not technically a check, but functionally similar. A money order is a guaranteed paper payment purchased with cash, debit card, or in some cases a credit card at post offices, banks, or retail stores. Like a cashier check, payment is guaranteed because it was prepaid at purchase. Money orders have a dollar limit (typically $1,000 per money order at the US Postal Service) and are commonly used when someone does not have a checking account, wants to send cash securely through the mail, or needs a guaranteed payment method without involving a bank.

 

Check Terminology Glossary

ABA Routing Number

The nine-digit number in the MICR line that identifies the issuing bank. Established by the American Bankers Association in 1910. Every bank operating in the US has at least one ABA routing number. Some banks use different routing numbers for paper checks versus wire transfers or ACH transactions. When ordering checks, always use the routing number printed on an existing check, not one from your bank's website that may be specific to a different transaction type.

 

MICR Line

Magnetic Ink Character Recognition. The row of numbers and symbols at the bottom of every check, printed in iron-oxide-based magnetic ink in the E-13B font. Banks use electromagnetic scanning to read MICR lines during automated processing. Checks printed without genuine MICR ink can cause processing delays, errors, and returns from branch deposits even if they pass mobile deposit. Every Checkomatic check is printed with bank-grade MICR ink on every order.

 

Fractional Routing Number

A backup form of the ABA routing number printed in fraction format (PP-YYYY/XXXX) in the upper-right corner of a check near the date. It existed before MICR technology and is still printed on every US check as a manual processing backup. If the MICR line is damaged or torn, bank tellers use the fractional routing number to identify the issuing institution and route the check correctly.

 

Bounced Check / NSF Check

A check returned by the bank because the account had insufficient funds (NSF) to cover the payment when it was presented. Both the payer and the payee typically incur fees: the payer's bank charges an NSF fee (commonly $25 to $35), and the payee's bank may charge a returned check fee. Some payees also charge their own returned check fees, and repeated bounced checks can result in account closure and entry into databases like ChexSystems that affect your ability to open a new account.

 

Stop Payment

An instruction to the bank not to honor a specific check if it is presented. You can initiate a stop payment by contacting your bank with the check number, amount, and payee. Banks typically charge a stop payment fee of $20 to $35 and the order is valid for six months, after which it may need to be renewed if the check has not surfaced. Stop payment orders cannot cancel a check that has already cleared.

 

Endorsement

A signature on the back of a check that authorizes deposit or payment to the endorser. A blank endorsement is just your signature; anyone can cash or deposit a check with only your blank endorsement, so only sign the back of a check when you are at the bank or ready to deposit it immediately. A restrictive endorsement adds the words "For Deposit Only" along with your account number, which prevents the check from being cashed and limits it to deposit into your specific account. A third-party endorsement (signing a check over to someone else) requires both your endorsement and the new payee's endorsement and is often not accepted by banks without advance notice.

 

Check Register

A record of every check you write, including the check number, date, payee, and amount. Check registers are typically found at the back of a personal checkbook or kept separately. Reconciling your check register against your bank statement monthly catches bank errors, fraudulent activity, and outstanding checks that have not yet cleared. Many personal check types from Checkomatic include a check register.

 

Duplicate Checks

Checks with a thin carbonless copy behind each check in the book. The duplicate automatically records what you write on the original. No separate register entry needed for each payment; the duplicate stays in the book as a permanent record. Useful for high-volume check writers who want a physical paper trail without the effort of entering every transaction manually.

 

Voucher Stubs

Detachable sections of a business check that remain behind after the check itself is torn off. One stub typically goes to the payee (vendor or employee) as a remittance detail; the second stub stays in the payer's records. Stubs carry fields for invoice numbers, purchase order references, pay period dates, deduction breakdowns, and running balance. They create a physical audit trail that supplements but does not replace software records.

 

Which Type of Check Do You Need?

With all these types of checks available, here is a direct decision guide based on situation:

  • Paying personal bills, rent, or individuals: Standard personal check or personal checkbook with duplicates for automatic recordkeeping.
  • Running payroll for employees: Check-on-top business check with voucher stubs, or dedicated payroll business checks with earnings and deduction detail fields.
  • Paying vendors from QuickBooks: Check-on-top voucher checks or 3-on-a-page checks, depending on whether you need physical stubs per check.
  • Paying vendors from Sage 50 / Peachtree: Check-in-middle format.
  • High-volume check printing with dot-matrix hardware: Continuous tractor-feed checks.
  • Multiple bank accounts or custom MICR layouts: Blank check stock with in-house MICR printing.
  • Guaranteeing a large payment (real estate, vehicles): Cashier check from your bank.
  • Providing banking details for direct deposit or ACH setup: Voided check.
  • Immediate need, no printed checks available: Counter check from your bank branch.
  • Traveling without bank access: Traveler checks or multi-currency debit card.

 

Why Order Your Checks From Checkomatic?

Understanding all the types of checks is useful. Ordering the right ones at the right price from a manufacturer that builds them correctly is what actually matters. Checkomatic has manufactured personal and business checks at its Monroe, New York facility since 1997. Every order is produced in-house on ABA-compliant security stock with bank-grade MICR ink. No third-party vendors handle your banking information. No setup fees. Free black-and-white logo printing on every check order.

 

Every Format in One Catalog

Whether you need a personal checkbook, QuickBooks voucher checks, 3-on-a-page business checks, manual payroll checks with duplicate stubs, or blank check stock for MICR printing, Checkomatic has it all:

 

 

Security on Every Order

Every Checkomatic check includes chemically reactive paper, genuine foundry watermarks, microprint signature lines, heat-sensitive thermochromic ink, void pantographs, and invisible fluorescent fibers as standard features. These are not optional upgrades. They are on every order because check fraud causes real financial harm and we manufacture checks that banks and auditors can trust.

 

Fast Delivery and Transparent Pricing

Standard orders ship 3 to 5 business days from proof approval. Rush delivery options are available at checkout. Every order includes a digital proof step where you verify every digit of your routing number, account number, and check number before anything prints. Pricing is clear and direct, with no bank-style markups, no setup fees, and quantity discounts built into the order process.

 

The Short Version on Types of Checks

There are more types of checks than most people realize, and each one exists because a specific situation calls for it. Personal checks cover everyday payments. Business checks add the format, voucher stubs, and security layers that business financial management requires. Cashier checks and certified checks are for high-value guaranteed transactions. Voided checks are for account setup and direct deposit. Counter checks are a temporary bridge. And within the business check category, the format you choose determines whether your accounting software can print checks correctly at all.

 

Understanding the terminology, including the MICR line, fractional routing number, endorsement rules, and stale check policies, prevents the kind of mistakes that cause checks to be rejected, returned, or exploited. If you are ready to order the right check type for your situation, start at checkomatic.com and explore the full catalog.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

What are the most common types of checks?

The most common types of checks are personal checks, business checks, cashier checks, certified checks, payroll checks, and voided checks. For businesses, the main format types are check-on-top voucher checks, check-in-middle, check-on-bottom, and 3-on-a-page checks. Each serves a different purpose depending on the payment situation and accounting software in use.

 

What is the difference between a cashier check and a certified check?

A cashier check is drawn directly from the bank's own funds after debiting the payer's account. The bank signs it and guarantees payment. A certified check is drawn from the payer's own account; the bank verifies the funds exist, sets them aside, and stamps the check to certify it. Both guarantee the check will not bounce, but a cashier check places the bank's direct liability on the payment while a certified check relies on the payer's earmarked funds.

 

What is a voided check used for?

A voided check has the word VOID written across its face, making it unusable for payment while keeping the MICR line readable. It is used to share your routing number and account number when setting up direct deposit with an employer, authorizing ACH payments, or configuring payroll or accounting software that needs your banking details. Never send a voided check via unsecured email since the MICR line contains enough information for someone to attempt an unauthorized ACH debit.

 

What is the MICR line on a check?

The MICR line is the row of numbers at the very bottom of every check, printed in magnetic iron-oxide ink. It contains three elements from left to right: the 9-digit ABA routing number (identifying your bank), your account number (identifying your specific account), and the check number. Banks use electromagnetic scanning to read the MICR line during automated processing at speeds exceeding 2,400 checks per minute. If the MICR line is damaged, the fractional routing number in the upper-right corner of the check serves as a manual backup.

 

How long is a check valid before it goes stale?

Most banks consider a check stale after six months (180 days) from the date written on it. After that point, the bank may refuse to process the check. Government and IRS refund checks may have stated expiration dates shorter than six months. Company payroll checks often expire sooner per internal policy. If you receive a check and do not deposit it within 90 days, contact the issuer to confirm it is still valid before attempting to deposit it.

 

Jun 15, 2026

Personal Checks vs Business Checks: The Full Difference

Most people researching personal checks vs business checks assume the difference comes down to whose name is printed on top. That is true, but it is also the least important distinction. The real differences involve physical size, format, security layers, how banks treat them, how the IRS sees them at tax time, and one specific legal protection that almost no guide covers: ACH conversion eligibility. If you are deciding which type of check to order, or whether you can keep using your personal checkbook for your small business, this guide gives you the complete picture.

 

What Is a Personal Check?

Understanding personal checks vs business checks starts with how each one works at the account level. A personal check is a paper payment instrument drawn against a personal checking account. It carries the account holder's name, home address, bank name, ABA routing number, and account number. The check authorizes the bank to transfer a specified amount from the writer's personal account to the payee once it is deposited or cashed.

Personal checks are used for everyday transactions where other payment methods are either unavailable or impractical: rent payments, utilities, gifts, medical co-pays, or purchases from individuals who do not accept cards. They come in a compact personal checkbook that fits in a bag or desk drawer, with each check measuring roughly 6 inches wide by 2.75 inches tall.

Most banks include a starter pack of personal checks when you open a checking account. Once those run out, you can reorder through your bank or, more cost-effectively, through a dedicated check printing service. Banks routinely charge $25 to $40 per box; third-party printers like Checkomatic deliver the same quantity for considerably less with no sacrifice in quality or security compliance.

 

What Is a Business Check?

A business check is drawn against a dedicated business checking account and issued in the name of the business entity, not the individual owner. Whether you run a sole proprietorship, LLC, S-Corp, or partnership, business checks carry your company name, business address, and any logo you choose to include. They are used to pay employees, vendors, contractors, taxes, rent, inventory, and any other business-related expense.

The format is fundamentally different from a personal check. Business checks print on a full 8.5 x 11-inch letter-size sheet at 8.5 x 3.5 inches per check, with one or two voucher stubs attached. Those stubs are where you record invoice numbers, payee details, deduction breakdowns for payroll, or balance information. One stub stays in your records; the other goes to the vendor or employee as a remittance detail. This stub system is what makes business checks genuinely useful for accounts payable and payroll, not just a cosmetic upgrade from personal checks.

Most business check formats are designed to feed through a laser or inkjet printer and align precisely with accounting software like QuickBooks, Quicken, Sage 50, and Microsoft Money. The check itself prints exactly where the software expects it, with the MICR line in the correct position for bank processing.

 

The 7 Real Differences Between Personal Checks and Business Checks

When you look at personal checks vs business checks side by side, seven concrete differences explain why the two are not interchangeable.

1. Physical Size and Format

A personal check is 6 inches wide by 2.75 inches tall. It comes in a wire-bound checkbook of 25 to 50 checks per book. A business check prints on a full letter-size sheet (8.5 x 11 inches), with the check occupying approximately 8.5 x 3.5 inches and one or two voucher stubs filling the rest of the page. The size difference is not arbitrary. Business checks need to feed through office laser printers and sit flat in filing systems, ring binders, or accounts payable archives.

 

2. What Is Printed on the Face

A personal check shows the individual's name, home address, and personal bank account information. A business check shows the legal business name, business address, and company logo when one is included. This distinction matters when a vendor deposits your payment. The bank verifies that the name on the check matches the account. If your business is an LLC and you pay a vendor from a personal account, you have created a paper trail that directly contradicts the legal separation your LLC is supposed to provide.

 

3. Voucher Stubs and Recordkeeping

Personal checks include no stubs. You write a check and the only record is your register entry. Business checks come with one or two detachable stubs per check. The stubs carry fields for invoice number, purchase order number, pay period, deductions for payroll checks, memo notes, and a running balance. That information stays attached to each payment and creates a physical audit trail without relying entirely on software records.

 

4. Security Features

Both personal and business checks include basic security features, but business checks carry more of them by default. Standard business check security features include:

 

  • Chemically reactive paper that shows visible staining if someone attempts to wash or alter the check
  • Genuine foundry watermarks built into the paper fibers at the mill, not printed on top
  • Microprinting along signature lines that reads as a solid line to the naked eye but breaks apart when photocopied
  • Heat-sensitive thermochromic ink that disappears when rubbed and reappears when released
  • Void pantographs that reveal the word "VOID" when someone photocopies or scans the check
  • Invisible fluorescent fibers embedded in the paper that glow under UV light, visible at bank counters

 

According to the Association for Financial Professionals, roughly 63 percent of organizations reported check fraud attempts in 2024. Businesses face greater fraud exposure than individuals because they write checks in larger amounts, more frequently, to more parties. The layered security on business check stock reflects that reality.

 

5. Software Compatibility

Personal checks are written by hand. Business checks are often printed directly from accounting software. This means the physical format of a business check has to align exactly with what the software expects. QuickBooks-compatible checks come in three supported layouts: check-on-top with two voucher stubs below, 3-on-a-page with no stubs, and wallet size for owner-operators. QuickBooks does not support check-in-middle or check-on-bottom formats. Ordering the wrong format means every check you print will be misaligned, and misaligned checks get returned by banks.

 

6. Cost Per Check

The cost comparison for personal checks vs business checks is closer than most people expect. per check than business checks because they use less paper, simpler layout, and fewer security features. A box of 150 personal checks from a bank runs $25 to $40. A box of 250 business checks from a direct printer runs $35 to $70 depending on format and security tier. The cost difference per individual check is smaller than most people expect, typically a few cents. That gap narrows further when you account for the bookkeeping, accounting, and potential legal costs that come from not separating your finances properly.

 

7. How Banks and the IRS Treat Them

Banks can place longer holds on business checks because they are often written for larger amounts. The IRS does not require you to use business checks, but it does expect clear separation between personal and business finances. If you commingle funds using personal checks for business expenses and your return is audited, you will need to reconstruct which transactions were business-related from a single mixed account. Accountants charge more for that work, and the IRS does not view mixed records favorably. Home-based business owners who cannot clearly separate expenses from a dedicated business account face a higher risk of having legitimate deductions questioned.

 

The ACH Conversion Difference Nobody Talks About

This is the distinction that almost every personal checks vs business checks guide leaves out, and it is genuinely important for businesses that write checks to vendors or employees.

When you mail a check to a vendor, that vendor or their bank can in many cases convert it to an electronic ACH debit rather than processing it as a paper check. This is called check conversion, and it is governed by NACHA operating rules. The converted transaction clears faster, but you lose the paper check record, and the debit may hit your account differently than a paper check would.

Here is what matters: personal checks are eligible for ACH conversion. Business checks are not, as long as they contain what is called an auxiliary on-us field in the MICR line. This extra field at the far left of the MICR strip is present on standard business check stock (which is nine inches wide, compared to six inches for consumer checks). Under NACHA rules, the presence of that field makes the check automatically ineligible for ACH conversion. The vendor or their bank cannot convert it without your knowledge.

For businesses running accounts payable or payroll, this protection matters. It means your payment clears as a paper check with full documentation, your bank gets a copy of the paid check for your records, and no party can electronically debit your account in a way you did not explicitly authorize. Personal checks written for business expenses carry none of this protection by default.

 

Business Check Formats Explained

Once you decide you need business checks, you have to pick a format. The format determines how the check and its stubs are arranged on the page, which accounting software it is compatible with, and what workflow it supports. Choosing the wrong one creates printer alignment problems that make every check you print unusable.

 

Check-on-Top (Voucher Style)

The check occupies the top third of the page. Two voucher stubs sit below it. This is the most widely supported format and the default for QuickBooks, Quicken, Rent Manager, and most other mainstream accounting software. It is the right choice for payroll, accounts payable, and any situation where you need a paper record attached to every payment. Checkomatic's check-on-top format is compatible with all versions of QuickBooks and includes full ABA-compliant security features.

 

Check-in-Middle

One voucher stub above the check, one below it. This format is used by Peachtree/Sage 50, Softpro, Landtech, and several title company software platforms. QuickBooks does not support this format. If your software is Sage 50, this is typically your required format. If your software is QuickBooks, do not order this. Checkomatic carries check-in-middle business checks for Sage and compatible platforms.

 

Check-on-Bottom

Two stubs above the check, which sits at the bottom of the page. Less common than check-on-top but used by certain AP automation systems and older accounting platforms. Checkomatic's check-on-bottom format is available in standard and security tiers.

 

3-on-a-Page

Three checks per sheet with no stubs. Each check is 3.5 inches tall with a small strip at the bottom to bring the page to letter size. This format costs less per check because you get three per sheet instead of one. The tradeoff is no voucher recordkeeping attached to each check. It works well for non-profits, reimbursement payments, simple contractor payments, or any scenario where you track details in your software rather than on the check itself. Checkomatic's 3-on-a-page checks are compatible with QuickBooks, Quicken, and Microsoft Money.

 

Manual Business Checks

Handwritten rather than printer-fed. Manual business checks come in three-to-a-page format with carbonless duplicate copies behind each check. The duplicates give you an automatic record of every check you write without entering anything into software. Checkomatic carries manual business checks in accounts payable, payroll, and multi-purpose configurations, as well as an executive deskbook and pocket check format for on-the-go use.

 

Blank Business Checks

No pre-printed bank information. You print all check data in-house using MICR toner and a compatible laser printer. This format works for businesses with multiple bank accounts, payroll software that prints banking data directly, or operations that need custom check formats. Blank checks from Checkomatic are available in check-on-top, check-in-middle, check-on-bottom, and 3-on-a-page layouts.

 

When Should You Switch From Personal to Business Checks?

The question of when to switch from personal checks to business checks has a clear answer: the moment you form a legal business entity, your personal checkbook becomes the wrong tool. An LLC exists specifically to separate you from your business for liability purposes. Paying business expenses with a personal check is the clearest possible signal that the two are not actually separate. A creditor who successfully argues you have been commingling funds can ask a court to pierce the corporate veil and hold you personally liable for business debts. That risk is not theoretical; it is a standard argument in commercial litigation.

For sole proprietors, the legal exposure is lower because there is no entity separation to protect in the first place. But the bookkeeping and tax arguments still apply. If you write more than a handful of business checks per month from a personal account, you are creating tracking work that grows with every transaction. Separating into a dedicated business account and ordering proper business checks eliminates that compounding problem.

The cost difference is smaller than most people expect. A box of personal checks from Checkomatic starts under $15. Business check formats start in a similar range and scale with quantity. The gap between the two products is not a budget argument against switching; it is a few cents per check for substantially better legal protection, recordkeeping, and fraud resistance.

 

Why Order Personal or Business Checks From Checkomatic?

Whether you need personal checks or business checks, Checkomatic manufactures both at its Monroe, New York facility since 1997. Every check, personal or business, is printed in-house with bank-grade MICR ink on ABA-compliant security stock. There are no third-party print vendors handling your banking information. No setup fees. No design fees for black-and-white logo printing on any order. Full-color logo printing is available for a small additional charge.

 

Security You Can Verify

Every Checkomatic business check ships with chemically reactive paper, heat-sensitive thermochromic ink, microprint signature lines, genuine foundry watermarks, invisible fluorescent fibers, and void pantographs. These are not optional upgrades; they are standard on every order because cutting corners on check security creates real financial risk for our customers.

 

Every Format, All in One Place

Whether you need a personal checkbook, QuickBooks voucher checks, 3-on-a-page business checks, manual payroll checks, or blank check stock for MICR printing, Checkomatic carries the full range:

 

 

Fast Turnaround, Transparent Pricing

Standard orders ship in 3 to 5 business days from proof approval. Rush delivery options are available at checkout for orders needed before a payroll run or closing. Pricing is direct with no bank markup, no setup fees, and quantity discounts built into the order form. Every order includes a digital proof review before anything prints, so you verify every digit of your routing and account number before your checks are manufactured.

 

The Short Version on Personal Checks vs Business Checks

Personal checks and business checks perform the same basic function but are built for different financial lives. The differences in size, security, software compatibility, legal protection, and ACH conversion eligibility are all practical, not cosmetic. If you run any kind of business entity, using the right check type is a small cost for a meaningful reduction in risk. The moment to switch is not when it becomes inconvenient to keep mixing; it is the day you form your business.

Checkomatic manufactures both personal and business checks directly, with every security feature included and no fees attached to what should already be standard. Order personal checks or order business checks and have them at your desk in 3 to 5 business days.

 

Frequently Asked Questions

 

Can I use personal checks for business expenses?

Technically yes, but it is not recommended. Using personal checks for business creates bookkeeping problems, complicates tax filing, and can weaken the liability protection your LLC or corporation provides. A creditor who argues your personal and business finances are mixed can ask a court to pierce the corporate veil, making you personally liable for business debts. Sole proprietors face lower legal risk but still create unnecessary accounting work by mixing accounts.

 

What is the size difference between personal checks vs business checks?

A standard personal check is approximately 6 inches wide by 2.75 inches tall. A standard business check is 8.5 inches wide by 3.5 inches tall and prints on a full letter-size sheet. The larger format accommodates voucher stubs, company logos, expanded memo fields, and the precise alignment that computer printing through accounting software requires.

 

Do business checks offer more security than personal checks?

Yes. Business checks typically include more layered security by default: chemically reactive paper, microprinting along signature lines, genuine foundry watermarks, heat-sensitive thermochromic ink, void pantographs, and invisible fluorescent fibers. Many also carry an auxiliary on-us field in the MICR line that makes them ineligible for ACH conversion under NACHA rules. Personal checks do not have this field and can be converted to electronic ACH debits without the check writer's explicit consent.

 

Which business check format works with QuickBooks?

QuickBooks supports three check formats: check-on-top (voucher style with the check at the top and two stubs below), 3-on-a-page (three checks per sheet, no stubs), and wallet size for personal or owner-operator use. QuickBooks does not support check-in-middle or check-on-bottom formats. Ordering the wrong format results in misaligned printing on every check, which banks will not accept.

 

When should a small business switch from personal to business checks?

Switch as soon as you form a legal business entity. If you operate as an LLC, S-Corp, or corporation, your business checks and payments must reflect the business name, not your personal name. For sole proprietors, switching at the point where you are writing more than a few business checks per month eliminates bookkeeping and tax complications before they compound. The cost difference between personal and business checks is small; the risk of not separating is not.

Jun 12, 2026

Check Endorsements and Stamps: How to Endorse a Check Properly

A check endorsement is the signature, stamp, or mark placed on the back of a check by the payee that allows the check to be deposited or cashed. Without an endorsement, the check is just a piece of paper. Under US banking law and the UCC Article 3 framework that governs negotiable instruments, every check has to be endorsed by the payee or their authorized agent before a bank will process it. For businesses receiving dozens of checks a week, endorsement stamps replace manual signing and speed up daily AP. We've been printing checks and endorsement stamps for US businesses since 1997. This guide covers the four types of check endorsements, how to endorse correctly, when to use an endorsement stamp, and how to avoid the mistakes that get checks rejected at the bank.

What is a check endorsement

A check endorsement is the signature, mark, or stamp placed on the back of a check by the payee, the person or business the check is made out to. The endorsement transfers the right to deposit or cash the check to the bank or to another party.

Three things make an endorsement valid:

  • It's placed in the endorsement zone on the back of the check (the top 1.5 inches, marked "Endorse Here")
  • It includes the signature, name, or authorized stamp of the payee
  • It's made before the check is presented to the bank for deposit

Endorsements are governed by UCC Article 3, the federal commercial code covering negotiable instruments, and processed through the Federal Reserve check clearing system under the Check 21 Act of 2003. Banks scan the endorsement zone along with the front of the check during deposit.

What are the four types of check endorsements

US banking recognizes four standard types.

  1. Blank endorsement Just the payee's signature. Once signed, the check becomes payable to anyone who has it. Convenient but risky if the check is lost or stolen before deposit. This is the most common endorsement for personal checks deposited in person.
  2. Restrictive endorsement The payee's signature plus a restriction that limits how the check can be used. The most common version is "For Deposit Only" followed by an account number. This protects the check from being cashed by anyone other than the bank for the specified account. Most banks recommend this for any check sent through the mail or stored before deposit.
  3. Special endorsement The payee signs the check over to a specific third party with "Pay to the order of [name]" followed by the original payee's signature. The new named party then has to endorse it again before depositing. Used when transferring a check from one party to another.
  4. Qualified endorsement The payee signs with "Without recourse" before their signature. This removes the payee's liability if the check later bounces. Rare in everyday transactions but common in real estate closings, legal settlements, and securities transfers.

Most businesses use restrictive endorsements ("For Deposit Only") on every check they receive. It's the safest default.

How to endorse a check for deposit

Five steps every business should follow:

  1. Locate the endorsement zone. The back of the check has a 1.5-inch zone at the top marked "Endorse Here" or with a horizontal line and small text. Don't write outside this zone. Federal Reserve scanners only read the endorsement zone.
  2. Sign or stamp inside the zone. Use the exact name printed as the payee on the front. If the check is made out to "ABC Marketing LLC," sign or stamp "ABC Marketing LLC," not just "ABC."
  3. Add the restriction. "For Deposit Only" followed by the account number protects the check from misuse if intercepted.
  4. Date the endorsement. Optional but recommended. Some banks track endorsement dates for fraud claims.
  5. Deposit promptly. Endorsed checks sitting in a desk drawer are the easiest target for internal theft.

Endorse only when ready to deposit. An unsigned check is worthless to a thief. An endorsed check sitting unattended is liquid money.

What is an endorsement stamp

An endorsement stamp is a rubber stamp that reproduces a business's endorsement information for stamping the back of incoming checks. Most include:

  • The business name (as it appears on the bank account)
  • "For Deposit Only" restriction text
  • The bank account number
  • Sometimes the bank name and ABA routing number

Endorsement stamps come in three formats:

  • Pre-inked stamps with built-in ink reservoir, typically good for 10,000 to 25,000 impressions
  • Self-inking stamps with a flip-pad mechanism, lower upfront cost
  • Traditional rubber stamps with separate ink pads, less common in commercial use

The stamp is applied to the endorsement zone exactly as a manual signature would be, replacing the need to handwrite the business name and account number on every received check.

This is different from a signature stamp for checks, which reproduces an owner's signature for signing outgoing checks. Endorsement stamps go on the back of incoming checks. Signature stamps go on the front of outgoing checks. They're separate products serving separate workflows.

When should a business use an endorsement stamp

An endorsement stamp pays for itself when:

  • Your business receives more than 20 checks a week
  • You're depositing checks through teller deposit or mobile deposit
  • Your AP or accounting clerk handles deposits as part of their daily workflow
  • Speed of deposit matters (faster endorsement means faster funds availability)

Common business types using endorsement stamps:

  • Retail businesses processing customer checks
  • Service businesses with recurring client payments
  • Property management companies receiving rent checks
  • Medical and dental practices receiving insurance payments
  • Law firms managing trust account deposits
  • Nonprofits processing donation checks

Endorsement stamps don't require bank authorization the way signature stamps do, because they don't replace the signature of an authorized signer on an outgoing instrument. They simply replicate the deposit endorsement the business is entitled to make on incoming checks.

How to endorse a check for mobile deposit

Mobile check deposit (through your bank's app) requires a specific endorsement that differs from teller or ATM deposit:

  1. Sign the back as usual
  2. Add "For Mobile Deposit Only" below the signature
  3. Include the account number the check will deposit to
  4. Optional: add the bank name for additional clarity

Most US banks require the "For Mobile Deposit Only" language to process the check through their mobile app. Without it, the deposit may be flagged for review or rejected. Some banks (Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo) print this requirement directly on the back of the check in fine print, others assume the depositor knows.

After mobile deposit, write "Deposited via mobile" and the date on the check, then store it for at least 14 days before destroying. This protects against duplicate deposit fraud and is required by some bank deposit agreements.

What happens if a check is endorsed incorrectly

Three common endorsement mistakes and what happens:

Wrong name on the endorsement. If the check is made out to "ABC Marketing LLC" but endorsed as "ABC Marketing" without the LLC, banks may reject it. The endorsement has to match the payee name on the front. Banks accept minor variations more often than they did 20 years ago, but exact matches are always safer.

Endorsement outside the endorsement zone. Federal Reserve scanners read only the top 1.5 inches of the back of the check. An endorsement written outside this zone is invisible to the bank's scanning equipment, even if it looks fine to a human. The check may clear, or it may not, depending on how the bank's manual review handles it.

Missing endorsement. Some banks accept missing-endorsement checks for known customers by treating the deposit slip signature as the endorsement (called a "deposit endorsement"). Other banks reject any check without an explicit endorsement. The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024, and banks have tightened endorsement verification as a result.

The fix for all three: stamp every received check with a properly configured endorsement stamp the day it arrives. Removes the human error variable.

How to get an endorsement stamp for business checks

Three steps.

  1. Confirm your exact business name as registered with your bank. This needs to match the payee line on incoming checks. If your bank account is in the name "Smith Marketing Group LLC," the stamp needs to say "Smith Marketing Group LLC."
  2. Choose your stamp configuration. Standard configuration is: business name, "For Deposit Only," and account number. Some businesses also add the bank name and ABA routing number, though those aren't required.
  3. Order from a check supplier or stamp specialist. Most check printers, including Checkomatic, offer pre-inked endorsement stamps as accessory items, often bundled with business check orders. Order a sample impression before committing to high-volume use.

If you're already ordering computer-printed business checks or refilling your checkbook, ordering the endorsement stamp at the same time is usually faster and ensures the business name and account number are consistent across your check supply.

Closing

A check endorsement is the small piece of writing on the back of a check that turns it from paper into deposited money. Get it right and the check clears. Get it wrong and you're chasing your bank for resolution. For businesses processing more than 20 checks a week, an endorsement stamp removes the manual step and the human error variable. Pair it with restrictive "For Deposit Only" language and your incoming checks are protected from theft between receipt and deposit. Checkomatic has been printing business checks, endorsement stamps, and check accessories for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you need an endorsement stamp paired with your next business check order, our team can match the stamp configuration to your account.

Frequently asked questions

Is a check endorsement legally required? 

Yes. Under UCC Article 3, a check must be endorsed by the payee before a bank will process it. Mobile deposit also requires "For Mobile Deposit Only" language.

Can I use a stamp instead of a signature to endorse checks?

 Yes. UCC Article 3 allows endorsements to be made by mechanical means including a stamp. The stamp must reproduce the business name and any required restriction text.

Do endorsement stamps need bank authorization?

 No. Unlike signature stamps used to sign outgoing checks, endorsement stamps on the back of incoming checks don't require advance written authorization from your bank.

What's the best endorsement for a business check? 

A restrictive endorsement: business name plus "For Deposit Only" plus account number. This is the safest default for any check received by mail or stored before deposit.

Can I endorse a check made out to two people?

 For "and" checks (made out to "John AND Jane Smith"), both parties must endorse. For "or" checks ("John OR Jane Smith"), either party can endorse alone.

How long should I keep an endorsed check after mobile deposit?

 At least 14 days. Most bank deposit agreements require holding the original for the review period. Mark "Deposited via mobile" with the date on the back.

 

Jun 12, 2026

Custom Checks with Logo: A Complete Customization Guide for Personal and Business Use

Custom checks with logo are checks built around your brand instead of the generic background patterns that come on bank-issued checks. They can carry your logo, your color scheme, a branded background pattern, signature lines that match your team, and security features you specify based on your fraud risk. Personal buyers customize for design preference. Business buyers customize for branding, fraud deterrence, and how their business looks to vendors. With check fraud now the most common form of payment fraud against US businesses, the customization itself adds a small but real layer of defense. This guide walks through what you can actually customize, how the design process works, the file formats and choices that matter, and how to order custom checks with your logo without the first-order mistakes we see almost every week.

What are custom checks with logo

Custom checks with logo are checks designed for your specific personal or business use, with your brand mark, business name, address, signature setup, and design preferences printed into the check itself. Unlike generic checks that come with stock backgrounds and standard layouts, custom checks let you control:

  • Logo placement and size
  • Color scheme
  • Background pattern or design
  • Font and text styling
  • Signature line layout
  • Security feature level
  • Layout format (voucher, three-per-page, manual, wallet)

The check itself still follows ANSI X9 banking standards and clears under the Check 21 Act like any other US check. The customization is purely visual and branding, not a deviation from banking specs. Your bank processes a fully customized check identically to a generic one.

What can you actually customize on a check

A surprising amount, beyond just adding a logo.

Logo and branding:

  • Logo in the upper-left zone (1 to 1.5 inches wide)
  • Watermark logo across the check background (subtle, lighter print)
  • Tagline below the business name (use sparingly)
  • Custom signature line text

Visual design:

  • Background color (yellow safety, green, blue, burgundy, gray)
  • Background pattern (security pattern, gradient, plain)
  • Font family for business name and address
  • Border style around check zones

Layout and format:

  • Voucher style (top, middle, or bottom check placement)
  • Three-per-page standard layout
  • Wallet-size personal layout
  • Manual checkbook format with stub

Security features:

  • Microprint along the signature line
  • Heat-sensitive ink
  • Chemical reactive paper
  • Watermark
  • Void pantograph
  • Tamper-evident backer

Each choice cascades into the others. Pick a darker background and a color logo gets harder to read. Add a watermark logo and you'll want a simpler corner logo to keep the visual from getting busy. The customizations work as a system, not isolated choices.

Custom checks vs standard checks

Standard checks come with preset designs from the supplier or bank. You pick a layout from the catalog, add your business name and address, and that's it. Custom checks let you specify the layout, color scheme, background, fonts, and security features that match your business or personal preference.

Trade-off: standard checks ship faster (often 3 to 5 days from a bank, 5 to 7 from a direct printer) and need no design decisions. Custom checks take a few extra days for design proofing and verification, but you end up with a check that fits your brand exactly.

For businesses with established visual identity (logo, brand colors, design guidelines), custom is the obvious call. For sole proprietors or businesses without a strong brand, standard checks are usually enough.

How to design custom checks with your logo

Six design decisions, roughly in order of importance.

  1. Logo file format and quality. Vector files (.EPS, .AI, .PDF) are ideal. PNG at 300 DPI is acceptable. Avoid 72 DPI web logos and JPEGs with compression artifacts. The most common first-order mistake is sending a low-resolution logo pulled off a website. It prints blurry on a check.
  2. Logo placement and size. Standard placement is upper-left, 1 to 1.5 inches wide, aligned with your business name. Don't place the logo over the MICR line, routing number, signature zone, or amount box. Bank scanners read those zones, and any visual interference can cause rejection.
  3. Color choice. Black-and-white is the safest for legibility on tinted check stock. If you're going color, send a CMYK file (not RGB), and ask the printer for a sample on actual stock before a large run. RGB files often shift color during print.
  4. Background design. Pick a pattern that contrasts with your logo. A complex background with a busy logo creates visual chaos and looks unprofessional. Simpler is usually better.
  5. Font and text styling. Pick fonts that match your other business stationery. If your invoices use a specific font, your checks should too. Visual consistency across your stationery is a small but durable trust signal.
  6. Security feature selection. Match security level to your fraud risk. Microprint, heat-sensitive ink, chemical reactive paper, void pantograph, watermark, and tamper-evident backer are the six features that actually deter washing and counterfeit. Our high-security laser checks include all six as standard.

Best practices for custom check design

A few rules that come up over and over in 28 years of printing.

Keep the logo simple. Detailed illustrations that look great on a website fall apart when printed at 1.25 inches wide on tinted paper. Use the simplified or wordmark version of your logo.

Match your other stationery. Your check is part of your business identity. The logo, colors, and fonts should match your invoices, letterhead, and contracts. Inconsistency signals operational sloppiness to the vendors handling your payments.

Always request a proof. Most printers send a digital proof before printing. Catch typos in your business name, routing number, or address now, not when 1,000 checks land in your office.

Order a small batch first. For your first custom order, order 200 to 500 instead of 2,000. Run a test print, verify alignment in your accounting software, deposit one as a small test transaction, then reorder confidently.

Update after rebranding. Old logos on three-year-old check stock look unprofessional and create confusion in your AP process. Reorder when your brand updates.

Personal custom checks vs business custom checks

Both follow the same ANSI X9 banking standards. The structural differences:

Personal custom checks are smaller (6 by 2.75 inches), sold in pads of 25 or wallet books, customized with background designs, monograms, and occasionally a personal mark. Used for personal AP, gifts, one-off payments. Customization is mostly aesthetic.

Business custom checks are larger (8.5 by 3.5 inches), often with voucher stubs or three-per-page layouts. Customization includes logos, brand colors, signature lines, security features, and software-compatible formats (QuickBooks, Quicken, Sage). Customization serves both branding and functional purposes.

You can't use personal custom checks for a business account or vice versa. The MICR line encodes which account they belong to, and banks reject mismatched checks.

How to order custom checks with logo

Five steps once you've picked your supplier.

  1. Pick the format. Personal: single or duplicate. Business: voucher, three-per-page, manual, or wallet. Match to your accounting software's print template if you're using computer-printed checks.
  2. Upload your logo file. Vector format if possible (.EPS, .AI, .PDF). If your logo file is low resolution, ask the printer if they offer a vector redraw or cleanup service.
  3. Choose your design elements. Background color, pattern, font, layout. Most printers show a live preview as you build.
  4. Select your security level. Basic check stock or full high-security stock with all six anti-fraud features. The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024, the highest rate of any payment method, so security level matters more than most buyers think.
  5. Submit verification and place the order. Voided check or bank verification letter goes in here. The proof review is non-negotiable. Read it carefully before you approve.

We've been printing custom business checks for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. Most custom orders ship in 5 to 7 business days, with rush options for tight timelines.

Closing

Custom checks with your logo turn every payment into a small branding moment. The design choices, from logo placement to background color to security level, are how you make your check look like your business and not a stock template. The mistakes that ruin custom checks are always the same small ones: low-resolution logo files, mismatched fonts, the wrong color profile, skipped proof reviews. Get those right and your custom checks print clean every time. Checkomatic has been printing custom business checks for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you want help designing the logo file or choosing the format that matches your accounting software, our team can walk you through it.

 

Frequently asked questions

Can I put any logo on my custom checks? 

Yes, as long as you own the logo or have rights to use it. Printers don't verify ownership, but using a copyrighted logo without rights creates legal risk.

Are custom checks different from standard checks?

 Yes. Standard checks come with preset designs and limited customization. Custom checks let you specify logo, color, layout, fonts, and security features to match your brand or preference.

What logo file format do I need for custom checks? 

Vector files (.EPS, .AI, .PDF) are best. High-resolution .PNG at 300 DPI works. Avoid web-resolution images (72 DPI) and compressed JPEGs.

Can I use a color logo on custom checks? 

Yes, though black-and-white usually prints sharper on tinted check stock. If using color, submit a CMYK file and request a print sample before a large order.

How long do custom checks take to print and ship?

 Most direct printers ship custom orders in 5 to 7 business days. Bank-issued custom checks take 7 to 14. Rush options exist at most direct printers.

Can I order custom checks for QuickBooks? 

Yes. Custom QuickBooks-compatible business checks work with QuickBooks Online and Desktop in voucher and three-per-page formats. The logo doesn't affect software compatibility.

Are custom checks accepted by all US banks?

 Yes. All US banks process checks printed to ANSI X9 banking standards under the Check 21 Act, regardless of customization.

 

Jun 10, 2026

Signature Stamp for Checks: When to Use One, When to Avoid, and How to Set It Up

A signature stamp for checks is a rubber stamp that reproduces the business owner's signature, used to sign outgoing checks without manually signing every one. They're a fixture in AP departments and bookkeeping operations processing dozens of checks a week, where manual signing eats hours. They also carry real fraud and legal risk if you don't set them up correctly with your bank. We've been printing checks and check accessories for US businesses since 1997, and the question we get most often is some version of "should we be using a signature stamp." This guide covers when a signature stamp makes sense, when it doesn't, the legal context under UCC Article 3, how to set authorization up with your bank, and how to order one without the typical first-time mistakes.

What is a signature stamp for checks

A signature stamp for checks is a rubber stamp that reproduces an authorized signer's actual signature. The most common types:

  • Pre-inked stamps with a built-in ink reservoir, usually good for 10,000 to 25,000 impressions
  • Self-inking stamps where the ink pad flips after each press
  • Traditional rubber stamps that use a separate ink pad

Stamps are custom-made from a digital or scanned image of the authorized signer's signature. Most stamp makers require the signer to provide a clear, dark-ink signature on white paper, scanned at 600 DPI. The stamp then reproduces that exact signature on every check.

In commercial use, signature stamps are usually paired with a check-signing log: a register of every check the stamp is used on, signed off by a finance officer or bookkeeper at the end of each day.

Is it legal to use a signature stamp on checks

Yes, with conditions.

Under UCC Article 3 (the federal commercial code that governs negotiable instruments in the US), a signature on a check can be made by any name or mark, including by mechanical means. A stamped signature is legally valid as long as it was applied by the authorized signer or with the signer's authority.

The catch: most US banks require you to inform them in writing that you'll be using a signature stamp before checks signed with the stamp clear without question. Banks call this a "signature stamp authorization" or "facsimile signature authorization." Without it, the bank may refuse to clear the check, freeze the account, or call the signer to verify each transaction.

Banks vary in how strictly they enforce this. Smaller community banks tend to require formal authorization. Larger commercial banks are sometimes more flexible. Always check with your bank's business banking team before setting up a stamp workflow.

When does a signature stamp for checks make sense

A signature stamp earns its keep when:

  • You're cutting more than 30 checks a week and the owner is the only authorized signer
  • You're running payroll or batch vendor payments where manual signing becomes a bottleneck
  • The signer travels frequently and can't physically be present to sign checks
  • The stamp is tightly controlled with locked storage, a signing log, and dual control
  • Your bank has approved the stamp in writing

It's especially common in:

  • Mid-size offices with 30 to 100 employees running payroll on paper checks
  • Property management companies cutting vendor checks across multiple properties
  • Construction businesses paying subcontractors weekly
  • Medical and dental practices with high vendor payment volume

When you should NOT use a signature stamp on checks

A signature stamp is the wrong call when:

  • The amount of a single check is meaningful enough to require executive sign-off (every business sets its own threshold)
  • The stamp would be the only signature on a large check with no second-level approval
  • Your bank hasn't authorized stamp use in writing
  • The stamp would be stored in an accessible location where employees other than authorized users could reach it
  • You don't have a check-signing log or dual-control process in place

The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024. A signature stamp left unlocked or used without controls is one of the most common ways internal check fraud happens. Insider fraud is the lurking risk most businesses underestimate.

How to set up authorization for a signature stamp with your bank

Five steps.

  1. Call your business banking team or relationship manager. Ask for the signature stamp authorization or facsimile signature form. Some banks have it online, others issue it on request.
  2. Submit the actual stamp image with the form. The bank needs a clean impression of the stamp (usually 5 to 10 impressions on white paper) to compare against deposited checks.
  3. Specify who's authorized to use the stamp. Banks often want a list of employees authorized to apply the stamp, not just the signer it represents.
  4. Specify the maximum check amount the stamp can be used for. Most banks require a cap above which manual signing is required. This is a useful internal control even when your bank doesn't require it.
  5. Update the authorization annually or when staff changes. When the bookkeeper or AP clerk who uses the stamp leaves, the authorization should be updated to remove their name immediately.

Without this paperwork, your bank can return any check signed by the stamp marked "unauthorized signature," and the business is liable for any losses.

How to order a signature stamp for checks

Three steps.

  1. Get a clean signature scan. The authorized signer signs in black ink on white paper, ideally with a felt-tip pen for clean lines. Scan at 600 DPI. Save as a PNG or PDF.
  2. Pick the stamp type and size. Pre-inked stamps are the most common for high-volume use. Sizes range from 1 by 0.5 inches up to 2 by 1 inch. Match the stamp width to the signature line on your check.
  3. Order from a check supplier or a stamp specialist. Most check printers offer pre-inked signature stamps as an accessory order. Order a sample impression on a test sheet before committing to a high-volume run.

If you're already ordering computer-printed checks at volume, it's usually faster and cleaner to order the signature stamp at the same time so the same vendor knows the exact signature line dimensions on your check stock.

Signature stamp vs digital signature: what to use when

For paper checks, a physical signature stamp is still the only practical option. Digital signatures don't apply to paper instruments because a paper check is, by definition, a physical document.

For electronic payments, digital signatures and ACH authorization replace the stamp entirely. If your business is moving from check payments to ACH for vendor and payroll, the digital trail removes the need for a stamp.

Most growing US businesses are in a hybrid state: a portion of vendor and payroll payments on ACH, a portion still on paper checks for specific situations like small vendors that don't accept ACH, legal payments, and government payments. The signature stamp covers the paper-check portion.

Closing

A signature stamp for checks is a small piece of office equipment that handles a real bottleneck for AP-heavy businesses. The legal risk is manageable when you authorize the stamp with your bank, control who uses it, and keep a signing log. The fraud risk climbs sharply when any of those controls slip. Most US businesses cutting more than 30 checks a week can benefit from a stamp. Businesses cutting fewer than that are usually better off signing manually. Checkomatic has been printing checks and accessory items for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you need a signature stamp paired with a business check order, our team can help match the stamp size to your check stock and walk through the bank authorization process.

Frequently asked questions

Is a signature stamp on a check legally binding? 

Yes, under UCC Article 3. A signature can be made by any mechanical means including a stamp. The check is valid if the stamp was used by the authorized signer or with their authority.

Will my bank accept stamped checks?

 Yes, with prior written authorization. Most US banks require a signature stamp authorization form on file before they accept stamped checks without verification.

How do I prevent fraud with a signature stamp?

 Lock the stamp when not in use, maintain a check-signing log, set a maximum check amount that requires manual signing, and limit authorized users to a small, current list.

Can I use a signature stamp for QuickBooks-printed checks? 

Yes. Stamps work on QuickBooks-printed business checks the same way they work on manually written ones. Stamp after printing, before mailing.

What size signature stamp do I need for business checks?

 Most standard business checks have a signature line 1.5 to 2 inches wide. Match the stamp width to your signature line.

How long does a pre-inked signature stamp last? 

10,000 to 25,000 impressions for most pre-inked stamps. Refillable models extend that significantly with re-inking.

 

Jun 10, 2026

How to Order Checks Online: A Buyer Guide for Personal and Business Use

If you're trying to order checks online for personal or business use, the process is more involved than most first-time buyers expect. You're handing a printer your bank account and ABA routing number, and asking them to produce a financial instrument US banks treat as legal tender under the Check 21 Act. There are hundreds of suppliers, dozens of format options, and security features that vary wildly between providers. This guide walks through where to order, what info you need, the difference between personal and business checks, how to vet a supplier before handing over your banking information, the security features that actually matter, and what to expect on timing and reorders.

Where can you order checks online

Three main paths.

Your bank. Easiest, because they already have your account on file. Checks ship through their internal vendor (often Deluxe or Harland Clarke). Trade-off: limited customization, slower turnaround (7 to 14 days), and a narrow design selection.

A direct check printer. Companies like Checkomatic, Compuchecks, Vistaprint, ChecksForLess, and Checks In The Mail print checks directly. You get more format options, custom logos, broader security choices, and shipping that lands in 5 to 7 business days for standard orders. Trade-off: you do the supplier vetting yourself and complete a verification step on the first order.

Big-box retailers. Costco Checks, Walmart Checks, and Sam's Club Checks all offer check ordering through their websites. Trade-off: design and security options are limited to what the retailer carries.

For most US buyers who order checks more than once a year, a direct printer is the better long-term option. Customization, format flexibility, and shipping speed all favor going direct.

Personal checks vs business checks

Both are legal under federal Check 21 Act processing and follow ANSI X9 banking standards. The structural differences:

Personal checks are smaller (usually 6 by 2.75 inches), sold in pads of 25 or in wallet-style books, customized lightly with a background design or a monogram. Used for personal AP, gifts, and one-off payments.

Business checks are larger (usually 8.5 by 3.5 inches), often with voucher stubs attached or three-per-page layouts. Customizable for logos, color, security tier, and accounting software compatibility (QuickBooks, Quicken, Sage). Used for vendor payments, payroll, and contractor pay.

You can't use personal checks for a business account or vice versa. The MICR line at the bottom encodes which account they belong to, and banks reject checks drawn on the wrong account type.

What information do you need to order checks

Same set of details whether you're ordering personal or business checks:

  • Your name (personal) or business name and address as registered with your bank
  • Your bank's ABA routing number, the nine-digit American Bankers Association number on the bottom-left of any existing check
  • Your checking account number
  • A starting check number (1001 for businesses, or wherever your last batch ended)
  • A voided check or bank verification letter for new orders with a new supplier
  • Authorized signer information for businesses with multiple signers

Personal check orders for new accounts may require a driver's license or other identity verification. Business orders require business address verification plus a voided check to prove account ownership.

How to order checks step by step

Five steps once you've picked your supplier.

  1. Pick the format. Personal: single or duplicate. Business: voucher, three-per-page, manual, or wallet. Match to your software's print template if you're using computer-printed checks.
  2. Enter your account holder and bank info. Name, address, ABA routing number, account number, and starting check number. Double-check every digit. The MICR line is encoded directly from these numbers in E-13B font, the magnetic ink font US banks have used since 1958. One typo and every check gets rejected at deposit.
  3. Choose your security features. Basic check stock, or full high-security stock with all six features: microprint, heat-sensitive ink, chemical reactive paper, void pantograph, watermark, and tamper-evident backer.
  4. Customize the design. Personal: background pattern, color. Business: logo upload (vector format), color, signature lines, address block.
  5. Submit verification documents and place the order. Voided check or bank verification letter goes in here. Once you're verified, your checks enter production.

Here's the mistake we see almost every week: skipping the proof review. Most printers send a digital proof before printing. Read it carefully. Catch typos in your name or routing number now, not when 500 checks arrive in a box.

How to vet a check supplier before ordering

You're handing over your bank account number, so vetting matters. Three-minute checklist:

  • Physical US business address (not a PO box)
  • Operating for at least five years (founding year on the site or Better Business Bureau profile)
  • Requires verification documents on first orders
  • SSL certificate at checkout (padlock icon in your browser)
  • Clear privacy and security policy explaining how they handle account information
  • Real customer reviews on Google or Trustpilot, both the four-star and the one-star ones

ABA routing numbers and checking account numbers are extremely sensitive data. Any printer worth using treats them that way.

Security features that actually matter

Check fraud is the most common form of payment fraud against US businesses. The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024, mostly through washing (chemically erasing the payee or amount and rewriting) and counterfeiting. The features that actually deter both:

  • Microprint along the signature line, too small for standard scanners to reproduce
  • Heat-sensitive ink in a corner that disappears when warmed (wash detector)
  • Chemical reactive paper that stains when bleach, acetone, or solvent touches it
  • True watermark visible from both sides at an angle
  • Void pantograph that prints "VOID" when the check is photocopied
  • Tamper-evident backer that records erasure attempts

Personal checks for low-value transactions can get by with basic security. Business checks for payroll, vendor payments, or any meaningful amount should have all six. Our high-security laser checks include all of them as standard.

How long does it take to receive ordered checks

Online direct printers: 5 to 10 business days from order date. Bank-issued checks: 7 to 14 days because their print runs are batched. Big-box retailers: usually 7 to 14 days. Rush options exist at most direct printers. Checkomatic ships most rush orders in 2 to 3 business days from our Monroe, NY facility.

Always factor in verification time on first orders, which adds a day or two while the printer confirms your bank account information before production starts.

How to reorder checks

Reordering is the easiest part of the whole thing. Most online printers store your previous order. You log in, click reorder, update the starting check number, and confirm. Production usually takes 3 to 5 business days because verification was completed on the first order. Update the order if you've changed banks, moved addresses, or switched accounting software.

Closing

Ordering checks online is more straightforward than people expect once you know what to bring: bank account details, verification documents, the right format for your use case, and a supplier you've actually vetted before handing over sensitive information. Personal buyers can usually get by with basic security. Business buyers writing meaningful amounts should always order high-security stock. Checkomatic has been printing personal and business checks for US buyers from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you want help picking between formats or walking through your first order, our team can do it on a phone call.

Frequently asked questions

Can I order checks without a checkbook from my bank? 

Yes. You can order checks online from any reputable printer using your ABA routing and account numbers. A starter checkbook from the bank isn't required.

Is it safe to order checks online? 

Yes, with a verified supplier that uses SSL and bank-grade security. Avoid unknown printers with no operating history.

Do I need to give my Social Security Number to order checks? 

No. Reputable check printers don't need your SSN. They need your bank routing number, account number, and verification documents.

How long does it take to get checks ordered online?

 Standard 5 to 10 business days from direct printers, 7 to 14 from banks. Rush options can deliver in 2 to 3 business days.

Can I order checks for a business and personal account at the same time?

 Yes, but they need separate orders. Personal and business checks are tied to different account types and require different formats and verification.

Do all banks accept online-ordered checks? 

Yes. Under the Check 21 Act, all US banks process checks printed to ANSI X9 banking standards regardless of where they were ordered.

 

Jun 08, 2026

Business Check Order: How to Place It Right the First Time

A business check order is more involved than ordering most office supplies. You're handing a printer your business bank account and routing number, and asking them to produce a financial instrument US banks treat as legal tender under the Check 21 Act. Every business check order requires verification, format selection, security choices, and a digital proof review before printing. We've been fulfilling business check orders from our Monroe, NY facility since 1997, and the same handful of first-order mistakes shows up almost every week. This guide walks through what a business check order includes, what info you need to submit, how the order process actually works, the most common mistakes that delay fulfillment, and how to track and reorder once you're set up.

What is a business check order

A business check order is a custom print order placed with either your bank, a third-party check printer, or a big-box retailer. The printer takes your business account information, your selected format and design, your security features, and your verification documents, then produces a batch of checks specific to your account.

Unlike off-the-shelf office supplies, a business check order can't be assembled on demand. Every order requires:

  • Account verification with your bank
  • A digital proof step before printing
  • A production run on the specific check stock and security tier you ordered
  • Quality control before shipping

That's why even direct printers take 5 to 7 business days for standard orders. The checks have to be made, not picked off a shelf.

What you need to submit in a business check order

Same documents and details any legitimate US check printer requires:

  • Business name and physical address as registered with your bank
  • Bank's ABA routing number (the nine-digit American Bankers Association number on the bottom-left of any existing check)
  • Business checking account number
  • Starting check number (1001, or wherever your last batch ended)
  • A voided check or bank verification letter for new orders
  • Authorized signer information for the signature line
  • Accounting software details (QuickBooks Online, Desktop, Quicken, Sage) so the printer can verify format compatibility

If a printer doesn't ask for verification documents, that's a red flag. Real printers verify because they're legally responsible for fraudulent check production under federal banking law.

How to place a business check order step by step

Six steps once you've picked your supplier.

  1. Pick the format that matches your accounting software. Voucher, three-per-page, manual, or wallet. Match the format to your software's print template if you're using computer-printed checks.
  2. Enter your business information. Name, address, starting check number, fractional bank code if your bank requires it.
  3. Add your ABA routing number and account number. Double-check both. The MICR line at the bottom is encoded directly from these digits in E-13B font, the magnetic ink font US banks have used since 1958. One typo and every check gets rejected at deposit.
  4. Choose your security level. Basic check stock or full high-security stock with all six features (microprint, heat-sensitive ink, chemical reactive paper, void pantograph, watermark, tamper-evident backer). The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024, the highest rate of any payment method. Our high-security laser checks include all six features as standard.
  5. Customize the design. Color, background pattern, logo upload (vector format if possible), signature line.
  6. Submit verification documents and confirm the order. Voided check or bank verification letter goes in here. Once verified, your order enters production. You'll receive a digital proof to review before printing.

The proof step is non-negotiable. Read it carefully. Catch typos in your business name or routing number now, not when 1,000 checks arrive in a box at your office.

How long does a business check order take to fulfill

Standard timing:

  • Direct printers (Checkomatic, Compuchecks, ChecksForLess): 5 to 7 business days for standard orders, 2 to 3 days for rush
  • Bank-issued orders (through Deluxe or Harland Clarke): 7 to 14 business days because their runs are batched
  • Big-box retailers (Costco, Walmart): usually 7 to 14 days

On first orders, add 1 to 2 days for verification. The printer needs to confirm your bank account is real and active before production starts. Most direct printers verify within 24 hours during business days.

Common business check order mistakes

After 28 years of fulfilling business check orders, the same five mistakes show up over and over.

Typos in the ABA routing or account number. This is the single most common reason for rejected checks at deposit. Always verify both numbers against a voided check before you submit, and read them again on the digital proof.

Skipping the proof review. The proof exists to catch mistakes before the print run. Skipping it means whatever's wrong on the proof is wrong on every check you receive.

Format mismatch with accounting software. Ordering 3-per-page checks when your QuickBooks template is set to voucher, or vice versa. Open your accounting software's Print Checks window before you order and confirm the format name.

Sending a low-resolution logo. A logo pulled off your website is usually 72 DPI, which prints blurry on a check. Send the original vector file from your designer (.EPS, .AI, .PDF) or a 300 DPI PNG.

Underestimating the security level needed. Businesses writing payroll or large vendor payments should always order high-security stock. Basic stock is fine for low-volume sole proprietors only.

How to track your business check order

Direct printers send tracking emails once the order enters production and again when it ships. Most include a shipping tracking link (FedEx, UPS, or USPS). Bank orders are harder to track because they move through internal mail systems before fulfillment, so timing is more opaque.

If your order is delayed past the quoted timeline, the most common reasons are:

  • Bank verification took longer than usual (the bank can take 2 to 3 days to respond)
  • The proof step is waiting on your approval
  • Production is running behind on a specific check format or security tier

A quick email to customer service usually clarifies which step is delayed.

How to place a business check reorder

Reorders are the easy part. Most online printers store your previous order. You log in, click reorder, update the starting check number, and confirm. Production usually takes 3 to 5 business days because verification was already done on the first order.

Update your reorder if you've:

  • Changed banks or business addresses
  • Rebranded or updated your logo
  • Switched accounting software (which may require a new format)

For most US businesses, reordering 200 to 500 checks at a time hits the right balance. Too many and they sit unused while bank info may change. Too few and you reorder constantly.

Closing

A business check order isn't complicated, but it has more moving pieces than most office supply orders. Get the format right, double-check the routing and account numbers, review the proof carefully, and pick the security level that matches your fraud risk. Direct printers fulfill faster than banks. Big-box retailers are convenient but limited on customization. Checkomatic has been fulfilling business check orders for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you want help picking the right format or walking through a first order, our team can do it on a phone call.

Frequently asked questions

Can anyone place a business check order? 

No. The account holder name must match the business and bank account on file. Printers require a voided check or bank verification letter on first orders.

How much information do I have to provide?

 Business name, address, bank routing number, account number, and verification documents. Reputable printers protect this data with SSL and bank-grade security protocols.

Can I place a business check order for QuickBooks? 

Yes. Our QuickBooks-compatible business checks ship in voucher and three-per-page formats compatible with QuickBooks Online and Desktop.

How long does a business check order take?

 Direct printers: 5 to 7 business days standard, 2 to 3 days for rush. Bank-issued: 7 to 14 business days.

What if my business check order has a typo on the proof?

 Don't approve the proof until corrections are made. Reach out to customer service, request the fix, and review the revised proof before confirming.

Can I place a business check order without a bank account? 

No. Business checks are tied to an active US business checking account. The MICR line encodes the routing and account numbers, which must match a verified account.

 

Jun 05, 2026

Business Checkbook Guide: What's Inside and How to Use One

A business checkbook is more than the stack of preprinted checks your bank sent when you opened your account. It is a system: the checks themselves, the register where you log every transaction, the cover or binder, and the accessory pages that keep it usable. With check fraud now the most common form of payment fraud against US businesses, the discipline of keeping a clean business checkbook matters more than ever. This guide walks through what's inside a typical business checkbook, how to use the check register correctly, the difference between bound and loose-leaf styles, the accessories that matter, and when it makes sense to switch to computer-printed checks instead.

What is a business checkbook

A business checkbook is the physical book or binder that holds your blank business checks, the check register where you track activity, and a few accessory pages like deposit slips and reorder forms. Most are bound in vinyl or leather-style covers and come in two main styles: pocket-size (around 6 by 3 inches) and ledger-size (around 9 by 12 inches). Pocket-style checkbooks are common for sole proprietors. Ledger-style binders are the workhorse format for offices writing checks daily.

All US business checkbooks follow ANSI X9 banking standards and are accepted under the Check 21 Act, the federal legislation that allows banks to process check images instead of physical paper.

What's inside a business checkbook

A standard business checkbook contains:

  • The checks themselves, either bound at the spine (manual style) or in three-ring punched pages (binder style)
  • A check register, a multi-column ledger where every transaction is logged: check number, date, payee, amount, and running balance
  • Deposit slips, usually three to six per book, with your business name and account information already printed
  • Endorsement stamps in some kits, for stamping the back of incoming checks before depositing
  • A reorder form in the back

In manual checkbooks, the checks are tear-out style with a perforated stub on the left that stays in the book. The stub serves as your paper record. In binder-style checkbooks, the checks are loose and the register sits in its own section.

How to use the check register

The register is the most important part of the checkbook and the part most users skip. Every check, deposit, or withdrawal should get an entry.

A correct register entry includes:

  1. Date of the transaction
  2. Check number (or "Dep" for deposit, "ATM" for withdrawal)
  3. Payee (who the check is written to)
  4. Description (invoice number, contract reference, or purpose)
  5. Amount in the debit or credit column
  6. Updated running balance

The register matters because banks and accounting software can disagree on what cleared and when. Relying only on your bank statement means you do not catch unauthorized debits or duplicate processing until reconciliation. A proper register catches issues the day they happen.

Business checkbook vs business check stock

The two products serve different buyers.

A business checkbook is a manual, bound book with checks already attached and a built-in register. You handwrite the payee, amount, and date. Common for businesses writing fewer than 30 checks a month.

Business check stock is loose blank check forms designed for printing through accounting software like QuickBooks or Quicken. You do not handwrite anything except the signature. Common for businesses writing more than 20 to 30 checks a month who need a full audit trail in the platform.

Most growing businesses start with a manual checkbook and graduate to check stock when handwriting becomes a bottleneck. Some keep both: check stock for routine AP, a manual checkbook for one-off payments outside the office.

How to keep your business checkbook organized

Three habits keep a checkbook usable.

First, write in the register before you tear out the check, not after. If you write the check first and update later, you will forget at least one entry a month. The check stub helps, but the register must be the source of truth.

Second, reconcile against your bank statement monthly. Compare every cleared transaction to your register. Mark cleared items so you can see what is still outstanding.

Third, store unused checks securely. The 2025 AFP Payments Fraud and Control Survey found 63% of US organizations experienced check fraud in 2024, much of it from physically stolen checks. Lock unused checkbooks in a drawer or safe. Track check numbers in sequence so any missing checks surface immediately during reconciliation.

What accessories come with a business checkbook

Standard accessories with most business checkbooks:

  • Vinyl or leather-style cover
  • Three or four deposit slips with your account information
  • A register section bound into the book or as a separate insert
  • A reorder form

Optional add-ons most printers offer:

  • Endorsement stamps with your business name and account number
  • Pre-inked address stamps for envelopes and forms
  • Check separators or dividers for binder-style checkbooks
  • Replacement covers

Most printers ship the accessory bundle with your first checkbook order and let you reorder accessories separately later.

How to reorder business checkbook refills

Most reorder forms are tucked into the back of the checkbook with your account information already preprinted, making reordering essentially a one-page form.

The process:

  1. Pull the reorder form
  2. Confirm bank account and ABA routing number are correct
  3. Update the starting check number to wherever you are in the sequence
  4. Mail the form back or submit online

If you have switched suppliers since your original order, you will need to provide the information from scratch: ABA routing number, account number, a voided check or bank verification letter, and your business address.

When to switch from a business checkbook to computer-printed checks

If you write more than 20 to 30 checks a month, manual checkbook writing becomes a bottleneck. Three signs it is time to switch to computer-printed checks:

  • You spend more than 30 minutes a week writing and recording checks
  • You are using QuickBooks, Quicken, Sage, or another accounting platform that supports check printing
  • Your check register and accounting software keep falling out of sync

Computer-printed checks integrate with your accounting platform, print payee and amount automatically, and give you a full audit trail in the software. The trade-off: you need a printer set up for check stock and a quick alignment test on your first order.

Closing

A business checkbook is a small but important piece of your financial infrastructure. The check itself is half the story. The register, accessories, and the discipline of writing every transaction down at the moment it happens are what keep your books clean. For businesses writing low check volume, a well-organized manual checkbook is fine. For higher volume, computer-printed checks integrated with your accounting software become the better long-term option. Checkomatic has been printing business checkbooks and check stock for US businesses from Monroe, NY since 1997. If you need help picking between a manual checkbook and computer-printed checks, our team can walk you through it.

Frequently asked questions

Do banks still issue business checkbooks? 

Most US banks still issue starter checkbooks when you open a business account. Refills usually go through Deluxe, Harland Clarke, or a third-party printer.

Can I use a business checkbook for personal expenses?

 Technically yes, but it muddles your books. Keep business and personal accounts and checkbooks separate to avoid tax and accounting complications.

How long does a business checkbook last?

 Most US businesses go through 200 to 500 checks per year. A standard checkbook with 300 checks lasts a year or two for low-volume businesses.

What if I run out of checks before reordering? 

Most banks issue counter checks for emergencies, but they have limited security features. Plan reorders before dropping below 30 to 50 unused checks.

Is a business checkbook safer than printed checks?

 About the same with proper security features. Manual checkbooks rely on physical security, while printed checks add software audit trails.

Can I print my business checkbook at home?

 You can print business checks from accounting software, but not the bound checkbook itself. Bound checkbooks require binding equipment only check printers have.

 

Jun 02, 2026

Switching Check Printers: A Migration Guide for Small Businesses

Most businesses stick with their original check printer long after it stops making sense, and the reason is almost always the same: they assume switching is a hassle. It isn't. The actual work takes about 15 minutes spread across your first two orders, and the savings show up the moment your next reorder lands.

Here's how to move from whatever you're using now, your bank, Intuit Market, Deluxe, or anyone else, without disrupting your accounting workflow or how your checks clear at the bank.

Why do most businesses switch check printers?

Price is the obvious one. The same checks run 30 to 70 percent less from an independent printer than from a bank or Intuit Market, and once you're reordering a few times a year, that gap compounds into real money.

Turnaround is the quieter reason. Bank and Intuit Market orders often take 10 to 14 days. Independent printers usually ship in 5 to 7. That difference doesn't matter until you're three days from payroll and realize you're almost out of checks, and then it matters a lot.

There's also service. Smaller printers tend to have support teams who can sort out a QuickBooks alignment problem, a MICR question, or a design issue in one phone call, rather than bouncing you between departments. And some suppliers simply don't carry what you need, whether that's pressure seal stock, a voucher format for less common software, or a particular security tier. Switching opens those options up.

For any business writing more than 100 checks a year, the savings alone make the case. Everything else is a bonus.

What information do you need to migrate?

It's the same handful of details you needed the first time you ordered checks, plus one extra. You'll need your routing number and account number, both of which are on any existing check or in your online banking portal, and your business legal name and address exactly as they appear on the account.

The one new piece is your last check number. The new printer needs to know the highest number you've used so it can pick up the sequence one above it. Grab a recent canceled check or check your accounting software for the highest number issued. That's the only switching-specific thing on the list.

Step 1: Confirm your last check number

Open your accounting software and find the highest check number you've written. In QuickBooks Desktop, that's Banking > Use Register, then sort by check number descending. In QuickBooks Online, run the Check Detail report and sort by number.

Take that highest number, add one, and that's where your new order starts. Say your current stock runs 4501 through 4750 and you've written through 4623. You'd start the new order at 4751 if you plan to finish the old stock first, or at 4624 if you're tossing the rest now.

Most people finish the old stock before switching and then continue the sequence. It avoids skipped numbers, and your bookkeeper will thank you at reconciliation time.

Step 2: Place a smaller initial order

Resist the urge to move your whole annual volume on the first order. Put in a smaller test batch, say 250 checks, and use it to confirm four things: the print quality is what you expected, the turnaround matched the quote, the support team is responsive, and the MICR line reads cleanly at your bank on the first deposit.

Once all four check out, your next order can be the volume you actually buy, whether that's 500, 1,000, or more.

Step 3: Test the first batch before depositing customer checks

When the new checks show up, run two quick tests before you start paying vendors with them.

First, deposit one into an account you control and watch how fast it clears. A properly encoded check clears in one to three business days on a normal bank deposit. If yours drags noticeably longer, the MICR encoding is probably off, and you want to know that before it's on 50 checks.

Second, run a test print through your accounting software. Print one check on plain paper, hold it against a real check, and confirm the payee, date, and amount land where they should. Two minutes here saves you a stack of wasted checks later.

Step 4: Update your accounting software

Good news: most software handles this on its own. You don't have to tell QuickBooks or Peachtree that you've changed printers. Next time you write a check, it picks up from the last number you used.

Two settings are worth a glance, though. If the new checks are a different format than the old ones, voucher instead of wallet, say, update the check style in your printer setup before you print. And run the alignment test the first time through, since every printer's stock sits slightly differently in the tray and you may need a 0.1-inch nudge even if your old checks were perfect.

Step 5: Notify any auto-pay vendors if needed

For almost everyone, this step is nothing. The check looks the same to your vendors, and the bank reads the same routing and account numbers no matter who printed it.

A few situations are worth a heads-up. Vendors that run lockbox processing scan every check, and a different security background or MICR placement can occasionally trip a manual review, though it's rare. Larger vendors that store check images will just update the image on file with your new style. And if a third-party payroll service prints checks for you, then technically they're the ones switching printers, so loop them in. Outside of those, you don't need to tell anyone.

What about the leftover checks from your old printer?

You've got three reasonable ways to handle unused stock.

The cleanest is to simply use it up before switching, which wastes nothing and keeps your check numbers running in one continuous sequence. That's what most businesses do. If your volume is low, you can also run both in parallel, keeping the old checks for the occasional payment while the new stock handles your regular runs. The bank doesn't care which it sees.

The third option is to discard the old stock, which makes sense if the address, name, or design is outdated. If you go that route, shred them carefully since they carry your routing and account numbers, and check whether your bank wants you to formally void them in writing for their records.

How Checkomatic handles new-customer migrations

We've moved a lot of businesses over from other printers, and 90.4% of our clients reorder with us once they've made the switch. Most of them come from Intuit Market, Deluxe, Chase Business Banking, or Bank of America Business.

Three things we handle for you during the move. We verify your routing and account number against the Federal Reserve directory and confirm the bank name matches before anything prints, which catches the typos that wreck a first order. If you've been buying voucher checks for QuickBooks, we ship the same format sized to QuickBooks default templates, so there's no alignment fuss beyond the standard test print. And our first-month follow-up is built around making sure the new checks are deposited cleanly, printed correctly, and cleared at least as fast as your old supplier, so anything odd gets caught early.

Most new customers save 30 to 70 percent on that first order versus their previous supplier, and the time saved on support calls adds up over the year. When you're ready to place a test order, browse our business checks catalog or QuickBooks-compatible checks.

What if you need to switch printers urgently?

Sometimes speed beats process. If your current printer goes out of business, order rush printing from a new supplier, usually one to two business days to print plus overnight shipping, and you'll have checks within three business days. If your routing or account number changes after a bank merger or account switch, your old checks are dead anyway, so place a new order with the updated numbers and rush it if you need to. And if you've had a fraud incident, discard all your unused stock, get a new account and routing number from your bank, and order fresh checks with the new numbers, rush shipping recommended.

Our rush turnaround on most products is 24 to 48 hours to print plus shipping. Overnight delivery runs an extra $25 to $40 and puts checks in your hands within three business days of ordering.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will my bank reject checks from a different printer? 

No. Banks don't track which printer made a check. They read the MICR line and process it. Any printer using ANSI-certified MICR ink produces checks that clear like any other.

Do I need to tell my bank I'm switching check printers? 

No. The bank doesn't need to know. The routing number, account number, and business name on the check are all that matter.

Can I keep my check number sequence going? 

Yes. Just specify the starting check number when you place the new order, and the new printer continues from where you left off.

What if my new printer's checks come in a different size? 

Confirm the dimensions before ordering. If you're moving from voucher to wallet or the reverse, update the check style in your accounting software. Same routing and account number, different format.

Are there any contracts I need to cancel? 

No. Check supply isn't a subscription. You order when you need checks, and your old supplier needs no cancellation.

The switch takes one test order

If you've been overpaying for checks for years, a 15-minute migration is worth the small effort. Start with our business checks catalog, place a 250-check test order, and confirm the quality and turnaround for yourself. Once you're happy, move your regular reorder volume over.

 

Jun 01, 2026

How Long Do Business Checks Take to Clear in 2026?

Ask "how long does a business check take to clear" and the honest answer is that it depends, and your bank's website is probably muddying it for you. Half the confusion comes from the gap between your posted balance and what you can actually spend. The other half is Regulation CC, the federal rule that decides how long a bank can sit on your money before releasing it.

Here's the realistic timeline for 2026, what slows things down, and the handful of moves that speed them up.

What's the typical clearing time for a business check?

If you deposit a check at the same bank it was drawn on, you're in the fast lane. Funds usually post the same business day and are fully available the next. Call it 24 hours.

Most checks aren't that simple, though, because they're drawn on a different bank than yours. In that case the deposit posts within a business day, but the full amount doesn't free up for two to five business days. The first $6,725 is available the next business day under Regulation CC, and the rest sits until the bank is satisfied.

Go above $6,725 and the bank can legally hold the excess for up to seven business days. And if your account is less than 30 days old, expect longer holds on the whole thing while the bank decides whether to trust you.

What actually moves the number around is some mix of how you deposited it, how big the check is, whether it's drawn on a local or distant bank, how old your account is, and whether you've had overdrafts or bounced deposits lately. Change any of those and the timeline shifts.

What does "clear" actually mean?

This is where banks talk past their customers. "Cleared" gets used for three different things, and they don't mean the same thing at all.

When a check is deposited, the bank has it and has recorded it in your ledger. It might show as pending. You can't necessarily touch it yet. When it's posted, it's been through overnight processing and shows up in your available balance, at least partly, so you can spend that portion. And when it's actually cleared, the money has moved through the Federal Reserve system, the issuing bank has confirmed the funds were there, and the deposit is final. Short of fraud, the bank can't claw it back after that.

For most checks the gap from deposit to fully cleared is one to five business days, even though posting can happen the same day. The trap is the "deposit accepted" message your banking app sends. That means deposited, not cleared. Spend against it before it clears and the check bounces, and you're the one who owes the bank.

What's Regulation CC and why does it matter?

Regulation CC is the rule that governs how long a bank can hold your deposit before the money is yours to use. The 2024 update, which took effect July 1, 2025, raised the minimum next-day availability amount from $225 to $275 and bumped the large-deposit threshold from $5,525 to $6,725 for both personal and business accounts.

In practice that breaks down like this. Cash handed to a teller is available the same business day. The first $275 of a check deposit comes available the same or next business day. The first $6,725 is available next business day for local checks, second business day for some out-of-area ones. Anything above $6,725 can take five to seven business days for most accounts.

The catch is the exceptions. A bank can stretch those holds if it has "reasonable cause" to think a check might be bad, or if your account has seen overdrafts or returned deposits in the past six months. Brand-new accounts under 30 days old can face holds up to nine business days on the full deposit. Whatever the case, the bank has to tell you when the money will be available at the time you deposit, and the receipt spells it out.

How does the deposit method affect clearing time?

Where you put the check in matters more than people expect.

Walking it into a branch is the fastest. A teller can sometimes release the full amount on the spot if you're a known customer, and the deposit usually posts the same day and clears in one to three business days. An ATM is a step slower because the deposit goes through overnight processing before it's even recorded, so figure next-business-day posting and two to four days to clear.

Mobile deposit lands in roughly the same place as the ATM, sometimes a hair faster. Posted within a business day, cleared in two to five. The wrinkle is the per-check cap, somewhere between $5,000 and $25,000 depending on the bank, so a large check has to go to a branch anyway. And once you're past $10,000, the branch is usually the fastest route regardless, because the bank can verify the source while you're standing there.

How Checkomatic checks affect clearing time

A well-made check clears faster for two boring reasons, and ours are built around both.

The MICR line is ANSI E13-B certified, so the automated readers at the bank parse it correctly on the first pass. Checks with off-spec MICR, which is where some discount printers cut corners, get bounced to manual processing, and that adds one to three days you didn't budget for.

The size matters too. Our checks match the industry-standard 8.5 by 3.5 inches for business voucher format, so the mobile apps and ATM scanners that auto-crop the image read it cleanly. Odd-sized checks confuse that step and trigger read errors. We've sized and encoded our checks since 1997 specifically for fast automated processing through the major US banks, and our business checks catalog holds that standard across every product.

What causes delays beyond standard hold times?

Most delays aren't about the hold schedule at all. They're avoidable mistakes.

An endorsement problem is the classic one. A missing signature, a missing title on a business check, or the wrong language for a mobile deposit, and the bank parks the whole thing until it can reach you. A damaged or smudged MICR line does the same, kicking the check to a human who has to read and key it by hand. So does a mismatch between the number you wrote and the amount spelled out, which makes the bank stop and confirm with the issuer.

Then there are the two that actually cost you. If the issuing account doesn't have the funds, the check bounces, your bank reverses the deposit, and you eat a fee. And if the issuing bank's fraud system flags the check, the hold stretches while they verify it's real.

None of these touch a normal deposit from an established account. They're the exceptions, not the rule.

How can you get funds available faster?

A few things genuinely work.

Deposit the check at the bank it's drawn on when you can. Hand a Chase business check to a Chase branch and same-day availability gets a lot more likely. For very large sums, ask whoever's paying you for a cashier's check instead, since banks treat those differently and usually release the funds next business day even above $25,000. And over the long run, a clean account history does more than any single trick. No overdrafts in six months, no returned deposits, a steady balance, and your holds shrink across the board.

For a one-off, it never hurts to ask the teller for immediate availability. If you've banked there a while, they'll sometimes say yes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my bank hold business checks longer than personal checks? 

Business accounts carry higher fraud rates, so banks hold longer to manage the risk. New business accounts under 30 days old face the longest holds of all.

Can my bank hold a check for more than 7 business days? 

Yes, in two cases: new accounts under 30 days, and accounts flagged for "reasonable cause" like recent overdrafts or returned deposits. The Regulation CC maximum is 9 business days.

What's the difference between "available balance" and "current balance"? 

Current balance is everything deposited. Available balance is what you can actually spend right now. Pending deposits show in current but not available.

Does FedNow change check clearing times? 

No. FedNow handles instant ACH and wire transfers, not paper checks. Its 2024 launch didn't touch check clearing timelines.

What happens if a check bounces after I've already spent the money? 

The bank reverses the deposit and your balance drops by that amount. If it goes negative, you owe overdraft fees on top. The bank collects from you, not from whoever wrote the check.

Plan for the longer clearing time

For cash flow planning, assume five business days from deposit to fully cleared funds, even though most checks beat that. If a vendor is counting on a check from you, build in a few extra days before they need the money to be there.

And if you're the one issuing the checks, our business checks catalog ships with ANSI-certified MICR encoding that moves through bank systems without the avoidable delays.

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