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Ach

ACH stands for Automated Clearing House, a United States electronic funds-transfer network that coordinates transfer of money between banks. It is overseen by NACHA—The Electronic Payments Association—whose operating rules govern the network. ACH payments are processed through two main U.S. operators: the Federal Reserve Banks and The Clearing House. The system is used for direct deposits, bill payments, and business-to-business transfers, as well as some person-to-person payments.

In operation, an originating depository financial institution submits batches of payment instructions to an ACH operator,

There are two main ACH transfer types: ACH credit, where the originator pushes funds to the recipient,

ACH is widely adopted by financial institutions and government agencies for efficiency and cost reduction. It

which
then
forwards
them
to
receiving
depository
financial
institutions
for
posting
to
recipient
accounts.
Settlement
occurs
in
batch
cycles,
and
funds
become
available
after
processing
by
the
receiver's
bank.
NACHA
updates
the
rules
to
address
security,
data
standards,
and
risk
management.
and
ACH
debit,
where
the
recipient
authorizes
the
originator
to
pull
funds.
Payroll
deposits
and
government
benefits
are
common
ACH
credits;
consumer
bill
payments
are
common
ACH
debits.
Same-day
ACH,
introduced
in
the
mid-2010s,
enables
faster
processing
for
eligible
transactions.
underpins
payroll
systems,
vendor
payments,
tax
refunds,
and
various
consumer
payments.
While
generally
secure,
ACH
transfers
carry
fraud
and
error
risks,
leading
to
regulatory
and
industry
safeguards
under
NACHA
rules
and
relevant
consumer
protections.