The account number assigned to a bank by the American Bankers Association. This number generally appears at the bottom of a check before the account number.
A nine digit number unique to each bank within the United States banking system. The ABA number is used to facilitate electronic payments (wires, ACH transfers) through the Federal Reserve Bank.
Routing number used to wire funds to any bank account.
A unique identifying transit number assigned to each bank by the American Bankers' Association National Numeric System. The transit number has three parts. The first indicates the federal reserve district and city where the bank is located. The second part indicates the assigned bank number. The third part is a check digit. The transit number appears in the upper right corner of checks as a numerical portion of a fraction.
A nine-digit number identifying a specific depository institution and appearing on all of its cash items. These numbers are assigned by Thomson Directory and are listed in its annual publication, Key to Routing and Transit Numbers.
See Routing/Transit Number.
a unique identifying number to facilitate the sorting and processing of checks
A nine digit number composed of eight digits and a check digit that identifies a specific financial institution. These numbers are assigned by the Thomson Financial Publishing and are listed in its annual publication Key to Routing and Transit Numbers.
ABA Routing and Transit Number. A unique identifying number assigned by the American Bankers Association under the National Numerical System. The transit number appears in the right corner of checks as the numerator (upper portion) of a fraction. It has two parts, separated by a hyphen: First part identifies the city, state or territory in which the bank is located Second part identifies the bank itself.