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When Should You Shred Your Financial Documents?

By
Mortgage and Lending with American Pacific Mortgage Corporate NMLS 1850

When Should You Shred Your Financial Documents?How do you know what happens to your documents when you put a piece of paper in the trash? It can be difficult to know who is seeing it and what they are doing with it. It isn't very common to burn trash anymore; therefore you can be sure that your paper garbage or recycling is likely to pass through several hands on its way to a landfill or recycling center.

Step-By-Step, Your Documents Can Get Pilfered:

Every step that occurs once the trash leaves your control has risk that someone will find personal information they can use to cause you harm. One way to safeguard personal information is to shred it before it goes into the trash.

Shredding devices are available at most office supply stores. Cross-cut shredders provide more security than strip-cut shredders. You may want to consider one depending on your level of concern. Shredding services or shredding events are often offered by financial institutions or community organizations.

Properly destroying sensitive personal information is a key step in helping to keep your identity secure. You really should shred any documents containing personal information, but be cautious not to shred financial documents that you may still need.

To Shred Or Not To Shred, That Is The Question...Or Maybe It's When To Shred:

The Better Business Bureau offers these guidelines on when to shred:

  • Deposit, ATM, credit, and debit card receipts can be shredded once the transaction appears on your statement
  • Canceled checks, credit card statements, and bank statements with no long-term significance can go through the shredder after one year; if used to support tax returns, keep them for seven years 
  • Monthly bill statements can be shredded one year after receiving, to allow for year-to-year bill comparisons (another good way to monitor your budget!) 
  • Credit card contracts and loan agreements should be saved for as long as the account is active
  • Pay stubs can be shredded yearly after reconciling with your W-2 or other tax forms
  • Documentation of investment purchases or sales should be kept for as long as you own the investment and then seven years after that; shred monthly investment account statements annually after reconciling with a year-end statement
  • Always shred documents with Social Security numbers, birth dates, PIN numbers or passwords, financial information, contracts or letters with signatures, pre-approved credit card applications, medical and dental bills, travel itineraries, and used airline tickets.
Posted by

David Kosmecki

Area Sales Manager NMLS 265365 | 76988

Direct: (763) 519-1100 | Toll Free: (800) 536-0233

   

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Thomas McCombs
Century 21 HomeStar - Akron, OH

It makes it hard to keep a neat office, doesn't it, if you have to keep documents too long.

I just had a situation come up on a 15 year self amortizing mortgage, where the lender withdrew money from my account automatically every month. I never missed a payment or was late, because the lender took care of everything automatically.

When the time came to make the final payment according to the amortization schedule that I had, I was told that I still owed the equivalent of 5 payments! The reason they gave was that I missed a payment 15 years ago, and unpaid balance just kept rolling forward accruing interest.

As proof, they offered a list of payments, with that one payment missing on their record from the third month of the payment record. There was never a notice provided to me or a late fee assessed.

I had destroyed my bank statements from that long ago, so I could not prove that they were wrong.

They also did not have those statements, so it was a standoff. If I still had those records I would be a little richer, as I could have stopped that lender larceny. I had to pay for the lender's mistake in order to get the mortgage released.

So your advice to keep everything for as long as the underlying account lasts, is excellent and on point.

Nov 23, 2013 10:29 AM