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Declined debits taken off available balance.

Broadwood
Posts: 706 Forumite


Can't find much about this problem so thought I should investigate further.
My story is as follows:
I used my debit card last Wednesday to pay for a £30 family ticket at a local heritage railway. The first attempt was DECLINED even though the PIN was verified and I had over £200 of cleared funds in my account. The lady repeated the transaction which succeeded and she gave me the two customer copies - the first of which reads "PIN VERIFIED" plus "DECLINED" and has NO authorisation number, whereas the second reads "PIN VERIFIED" and DOES have an authorisation number.
When I checked my bank account later that evening both lots of £30 had been deducted from my available balance. The following day one transaction of £30 was listed as expected.
Today one week later, the £30 from the DECLINED transaction is still missing from my available balance and my bank says it might take up to TWO WEEKS for the money to be released back on to my available balance.
If this is normal for the payments system then said system is NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE and needs changing. This is, in effect, temporary unauthorised theft of account-holders' money.
Has this happened to others? What if anything is the solution?
My story is as follows:
I used my debit card last Wednesday to pay for a £30 family ticket at a local heritage railway. The first attempt was DECLINED even though the PIN was verified and I had over £200 of cleared funds in my account. The lady repeated the transaction which succeeded and she gave me the two customer copies - the first of which reads "PIN VERIFIED" plus "DECLINED" and has NO authorisation number, whereas the second reads "PIN VERIFIED" and DOES have an authorisation number.
When I checked my bank account later that evening both lots of £30 had been deducted from my available balance. The following day one transaction of £30 was listed as expected.
Today one week later, the £30 from the DECLINED transaction is still missing from my available balance and my bank says it might take up to TWO WEEKS for the money to be released back on to my available balance.
If this is normal for the payments system then said system is NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE and needs changing. This is, in effect, temporary unauthorised theft of account-holders' money.
Has this happened to others? What if anything is the solution?
Never trust a financial institution.
Still studying at the University of Life.
Still studying at the University of Life.
0
Comments
-
Solutions:
- Pay with cash
- Use a credit card
- Get an overdraft
Has this happened to others? What if anything is the solution?This is a system account and does not represent a real person. To contact the Forum Team email forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com0 -
Can't find much about this problem so thought I should investigate further.
My story is as follows:
I used my debit card last Wednesday to pay for a £30 family ticket at a local heritage railway. The first attempt was DECLINED even though the PIN was verified and I had over £200 of cleared funds in my account. The lady repeated the transaction which succeeded and she gave me the two customer copies - the first of which reads "PIN VERIFIED" plus "DECLINED" and has NO authorisation number, whereas the second reads "PIN VERIFIED" and DOES have an authorisation number.
When I checked my bank account later that evening both lots of £30 had been deducted from my available balance. The following day one transaction of £30 was listed as expected.
Today one week later, the £30 from the DECLINED transaction is still missing from my available balance and my bank says it might take up to TWO WEEKS for the money to be released back on to my available balance.
If this is normal for the payments system then said system is NOT FIT FOR PURPOSE and needs changing. This is, in effect, temporary unauthorised theft of account-holders' money.
Has this happened to others? What if anything is the solution?
Well actually its not as nothing has left your account0 -
glentoran99 wrote: »Well actually its not as nothing has left your accountNever trust a financial institution.
Still studying at the University of Life.0 -
Solutions:
- Pay with cash
- Use a credit card
- Get an overdraft
There is NO authorisation number on the cardholder copy. The transaction WASN'T authorised. It was DECLINED.
Your solutions are a "workaround". They don't solve the actual problem of the payments system being stacked against account holders.Never trust a financial institution.
Still studying at the University of Life.0 -
This has happened many many times to many many people.
This will drop off in time and should not debit your account.
Unfortunately, it's a matter of patience.I’m a Forum Ambassador and I support the Forum Team on the Budgeting & Bank Accounts, Credit Cards, Credit File & Ratings and Energy boards. If you need any help on these boards, do let me know. Please note that Ambassadors are not moderators. Any posts you spot in breach of the Forum Rules should be reported via the report button, or by emailing forumteam@moneysavingexpert.com. All views are my own and not the official line of MoneySavingExpert.
If you can't be the best -
Just be better than you were yesterday.0 -
They don't solve the actual problem of the payments system being stacked against account holders.
How often does that happen?
I believe in 20 years of debit card use it has happened to me once. Judging by your reaction, it is the first time it has happened to you. Yes, it can happen occasionally, but it is a rare event indeed!
Some saying about a sledgehammer and a nut springs to mind.0 -
bengal-stripe wrote: »How often does that happen?
I believe in 20 years of debit card use it has happened to me once. Judging by your reaction, it is the first time it has happened to you. Yes, it can happen occasionally, but it is a rare event indeed!
Some saying about a sledgehammer and a nut springs to mind.
What probably happened was that on the first attempt it was authorising and the signal got interrupted but the bank had already authorised it (just the card machine never received the data). Its an unfortunate reality with chip cards (A magnetic stripe transaction could back and apply the first authorisation code, without obtaining a new one).0
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