Stands for Automated Clearing House, a network run by Nacha (National Automated Clearing House Association). Since the 1970s, the ACH network has electronically moved money between bank accounts across the United States.
The “Clearing House” where participating depository financial institutions automatically settle ACH Entries. There are only two: The Federal Reserve (FedACH) and The Clearing House (EPN).
A written agreement signed by an employee or customer, or an authenticated electronic process, that allows the posting of debits or credits arising from ACH transactions to the employee’s or customer’s account.
A method of aggregating multiple ACH Entries into “batch” files before they are transmitted between Third-Party Senders, ODFIs, RDFIs, and the ACH Operator.
US legislation implemented in 1970 to prevent criminals from using financial institutions to launder money. Institutions must report large transactions, suspicious activity, and maintain compliance with regulatory agencies.