Deposit Slip
A deposit slip is a form used to record details of money deposited into a bank account. It identifies the depositor, date, account number, and the breakdown of cash and checks so the bank can credit the correct account and create a transaction record.
What a deposit slip includes
- Depositor name (sometimes optional)
- Date of deposit
- Bank account number (or preprinted on slips in checkbooks)
- Breakdown of items: cash, checks (itemized), subtotal
- Less: cash back (if requested) and net total
- Signature (required if receiving cash back)
How it works (step by step)
- Fill in the required fields on the deposit slip before approaching the teller.
- If the slip is from your checkbook, routing and account numbers may be preprinted. If using a blank slip, write your account number where indicated.
- List each check, the cash amount, and any cash back requested. Calculate the subtotal and total.
- Give the completed slip and deposit items to the teller. The teller verifies the items against the slip, processes the deposit, and prints a receipt for you.
- Keep the receipt as proof of the transaction; you can request an itemized copy from the bank if needed for disputes.
Benefits
- Proof of deposit — shows the bank accepted the funds and the total deposited.
- Itemization — records how the total was composed (checks vs. cash).
- Accuracy and reconciliation — helps tellers and customers verify amounts and prevents unaccounted deposits.
- Useful for disputes — provides evidence if a deposit is not applied correctly.
Routing number
A routing number is a nine-digit code that identifies the bank and is often printed on deposit slips and checks.
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Record retention
Banks are required by federal law to retain records of deposits exceeding $100 for at least five years. These records are commonly stored digitally.
Modern alternatives
Deposit slips are less necessary today thanks to electronic options:
* Mobile deposit — take a photo of a check and submit it via your bank’s app (usually requires enrollment and may have deposit limits).
ATMs — many accept checks and cash and credit accounts electronically without a paper slip.
Bank teller systems and remote deposit capture — banks often process deposits digitally, reducing reliance on paper slip forms.
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Quick FAQs
- Do I always need a deposit slip?
No. Mobile deposits and many ATMs let you deposit without a paper slip. - Can I get an itemized copy of a deposit later?
Yes — request a copy from your bank if you need the breakdown that made up the total. - Does the teller’s receipt show the itemized amounts?
Teller receipts often show only the total; ask for an itemized record if necessary.
Deposit slips remain a simple, reliable way to document deposits, but digital banking tools now offer faster, paperless alternatives while preserving accuracy and recordkeeping.