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How to Find Your Bank’s Routing Number

woman balancing checkbook“Even if you pay all your bills online, you still need your routing number to set up payments. Steve Debenport/Getty Images

Most customers pay by for goods and services by credit card, phone apps or via the computer, so paper checks are going the way of the dinosaur. But you still need information from your old-school checkbook in order to set up automatic monthly bill payments or direct deposits online. That includes your bank account number and the routing number listed on your checks.

The routing number is also known as the ABA (America Bankers Association) routing transit number (RTN), a nine-digit code that’s printed on the bottom of checks and other types of financial documents. It essentially denotes the state or region where the bank account was opened and the name of the bank on which the check was drawn.

Routing numbers aren’t secret or sensitive information. They’re simply a way for banks to sort payments. Here are four ways to find it:

To the right of the routing number is your account number, but keep in mind that the position of the account and routing numbers is reversed on some checks. Most account numbers are 10 to 12 digits, while the routing number is always nine.

NOW THAT’S INTERESTING

Check writing skyrocketed in the U.S. after World War II. Within a few years, billions of checks were flowing through banks all over the country, and branch managers were forced to employ several people just for the purpose of processing checks. That’s when engineers developed those funky numbers on the bottom of the checks – they can be read by machines, and thus, checks can be processed much more quickly.

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