EFTA01122765.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 112.6 KB • Feb 3, 2026 • 2 pages
Vie bashington post
T-Mobile will help you cash your checks:
how it works
By Hayley Tsukayama: January 22
T-Mobile is fond of saying that it's redefining the
mobile carrier world with its "uncarrier" initiatives.
And its latest announcement, on Wednesday, adds a
new angle to the definition of "mobile banking": The
company is now getting into the check-cashing
business.
The service, called Mobile Money, is timed for a
February launch and will be available at T-Mobile
retail locations and participating Safeway stores
around the country, the company says. The big
promise from T-Mobile is that the service will allow
users to cash their checks without "excessive fees"
that traditional check-cashing companies require.
Customers don't have to be T-Mobile wireless
subscribers to be Mobile Money subscribers — or
vice versa — but being both has its perks. The
company will automatically waive monthly fees for
its wireless customers.
"Millions of Americans pay outrageous fees to check
cashers, payday lenders and other predatory businesses — just for the right to use their own money,"
said T-Mobile chief executive John Legere in a press release. "Mobile Money shifts the balance of power
for T-Mobile customers and keeps more money in their pockets."
So, how will it work? T-Mobile customers will get a T-Mobile prepaid Visa Card that can be loaded and
reloaded through the Mobile Money app. The company did not give specifics but said it will offer the
services at a "reduced fee or $0 cost" for its registered wireless customers. The service will require no
minimum balance and also promises no overdraft fees. On an information page, T-Mobile said there will
be fees for "non-typical use," such as overnight card shipments, using an out-of-network ATM and
putting rush demands on checks to be cashed.
From their Mobile Money accounts, users will be able to direct-deposit paychecks, deposit checks via
smartphone camera, make purchases, pay bills and withdraw cash from 42,000 ATMs across the
country, T-Mobile said.
EFTA01122765
The service sounds similar to a program Walmart and American Express began offering in 2012 called
Bluebird, which gives users a prepaid card aimed at the "non-banked" or "underbanked" sections of the
population who do not have traditional bank accounts. As The Washington Post's Danielle Douglas
reported, banks are bracing for the possibility that the federal government may begin imposing new
rules on such consumer products, including prepaid cards.
But T-Mobileappears eager to step into the space. "Mobile Money builds on T-Mobile's financing
experience to provide a sensible and affordable alternative to checking fees for the roughly 68 million
U.S. adults who do not have traditional accounts and have to rely on alternative financial services," the
company said in a statement.
The move makes a certain amount of sense , given that T-Mobile has aggressively gone after the lower
end of the smartphone market and the prepaid market — moves that make them particularly popular
with young customers and those in urban areas. Those demographics match pretty well with the FDIC's
profile of American's unbanked from a 2012 report.
Those interested can sign up for the service starting Wednesday, T-Mobile said.
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