Managing ACH Returns at Scale (2024)

As companies scale, handling ACH returns efficiently becomes a priority. Like chargebacks, returns are less than optimal for businesses. While some returns are unavoidable, companies can take proactive steps to reduce the number of ACH returns they receive. A systematic process for handling returns is also key for companies that move money, especially those looking to expand.

What Companies Can Learn From ACH Returns

The volume of payments processed by the ACH network has been increasing steadily for over ten years. In 2022, the network processed 30 billion payments, amounting to $76.7 trillion, and representing an increase of 3% and 5.6% respectively over the previous year. This growth isn’t surprising given that ACH payments are cost-effective and convenient for businesses, with significant benefits over cards.

For this reason, companies need a thoughtful approach to ACH returns. Returns indicate a gap between expected and actual outcome—a gap that opens companies up to liability.

Depending on the industry, returns can be a major issue. For HR and payroll services, as an example, if a bank rejects an ACH credit (or direct deposit) to an employee from their customer’s bank account, that employee won’t receive their wages. For context, these companies send millions of paychecks—if even a small percentage fail, that constitutes a lot of money. And with 62% of Americans living paycheck to paycheck, an ACH return in this scenario could have serious consequences (for impacted employees and a company’s brand image).

There are 80+ ACH return codes and several provide important account data. For example, if an account holder is deceased (R15 or R14) or a business needs to update a routing number (R12), which happens when banks merge, this information needs to be accounted for. The latter can also warrant a Notification of Change or NOC (for routing numbers, CO2 or CO3). There are 50 distinct NOC codes that provide information about a user account that a company should be prepared to update or address.

ACH returns indicate a problem with the initial payment but scale intensifies the issue—and magnifies associated challenges. Whereas manually managing returns may be feasible when companies first launch, as they grow, this becomes both highly inefficient and high risk.

The more ACH payments a company processes, the more ACH returns they are likely to receive. For most companies, receiving ACH returns is likely a bigger concern than originating ACH returns. If an ACH payment allows users to take actions in an application, companies need to know the money is actually there.

Understanding Returns: Challenges and Impacts

A few characteristics of ACH returns make them particularly difficult for businesses.

Time frames vary

ACH returns operate on variable time frames depending on the type of return. Although most ACH returns happen quickly, there is an acceptable range of 2-60 days for some returns—depending on whether you’re a business or consumer—making it challenging to predict cash flow. Some companies incorporate a “seasoning period” wherein payments are held for three days, after which the company assumes they aren’t likely to be returned. However, this approach is far from foolproof.

Attribution is tricky

ACH return attribution can be challenging, especially when a lot of payments look the same (i.e., a company offers many products or services at the same price point). Further, as a veteran Modern Treasury engineer puts it, the standards aren’t standard. Although there are rules for formatting on ACH returns, each RDFIs may interpret those guidelines differently. For multi-banked companies, each bank may be using a different format. It’s also possible that companies include important identifiers in the payment order that don’t appear in the return.

The stakes are high

Nacha’s returns limits mean companies can be removed from the network if they are flagged for receiving too many returns. Business impacts can also be significant. A high ACH return rate and poor return handling can literally cost companies time (staff time handling returns) and money (staff time and money lost when returns occur). Further, businesses have less accuracy when it comes to a real-time financial picture which can negatively impact decision making.

Preventing ACH Returns

Successfully managing ACH returns requires thoughtful prevention in tandem with systematic return handling. Companies may choose to forgo this process in light of limited resources and sufficient risk tolerance. However, as previously mentioned, what might be acceptable at smaller companies can swiftly become a major problem at scale.

Proactively avoiding returns centers around the following steps.

1. Account and funds verification

As part of new customer onboarding and customer banking account updates, companies should verify the user’s account. This requires ensuring the counterparty details are correct. It should be noted that the fewer people and tools this information passes through, the fewer potential points of failure.

There are two main approaches to this process:

  • Microdeposits are an option in which a business sends small amounts of money to the user bank account they are verifying. Downsides here include a reliance on customer communication and potential edge-case failures. Modern Treasury’s microdeposit verification API safeguards against failures and requires only three API endpoints to execute.
  • ACH Prenotes are another option wherein a company sends a zero dollar payment to validate the customer account. An upside of prenotes is their ability to help discover debit blocks, but a potential complication is that the issuing bank only has to respond to a prenote if an account does not exist. This means it’s possible for companies to transact with an incorrect account number at the right bank.

A few additional resources include:

  • Plaid, a partner company that can verify accounts without touching sensitive bank account details. Via our integration with Plaid, Modern Treasury customers can opt to receive a processor token instead of the bank details, to protect customers and decrease liability. Plaid also makes it possible to perform NSF checks, as “non-sufficient funds” are a primary source of ACH returns.
  • Modern Treasury’s Pre-Built UIs, a set of low-code tools that simplify onboarding and in-app payments. Customers can create a custom branded form and Modern Treasury collects the required information from customers.

2. Clear, proactive communication

Nearly everyone can relate to the experience of seeing a charge in their bank account from an unfamiliar source. Businesses that transact using an account or name customers don’t immediately recognize are likely to encounter more returns. Clarity can help.

Make sure customers know when money is coming out and what they’ll see in their bank account. As an example, it’s become common practice for cell phone companies and loan providers to text and email customers a few days before a payment is due, providing them with this information.

Businesses should be considerate with their statement descriptor so it’s recognizable. For those with a parent company, the customer needs to see a business name or some kind of familiar context. This is especially important when the biller might change (i.e., through mergers or acquisitions).

Managing Current ACH Returns

Even with robust deterrents in place, ACH returns can still occur. When companies receive returns, there are three best practices for managing them.

1. Diligent return handling

Many companies have created systems for handling more common return codes. While writing logic for a handful of return types is feasible, what about the less common types? To be fully prepared to handle ACH returns at scale, companies need systematic handling for all 80+ return codes, as well as a system for handling 50+ NOCs.

To complicate matters, each RDFI is likely to manage returns distinctly. They may use APIs, unique file types, or neither. Modern Treasury’s Payments product manages all return codes and NOCs—each is handled as a unified object that isn’t dependent on any one bank. If a company built this in-house, they would have to ensure they were correctly creating and extracting returns from each banking source.

2. Accurate reconciliation

ACH returns can complicate bank reconciliation, as each return generates three items to match up: the original payment (the credit), the return, and the debit. If transactions with returns aren’t reconciling, a few scenarios are likely:

  • A transaction is missing
  • The money movement data is missing (i.e., the return transaction doesn’t have enough data to link to the originated payment)
  • The ACH return itself is missing

If they are unable to resolve it, a company may have to contact the bank or re-pull payment statuses. Modern Treasury manages this process, one which would be prohibitive at scale. For a company to build this functionality on their own, they would have to write a matching engine, and then maintain it and keep it up to date.

Reconciliation serves an essential function, especially for ACH returns, to make sure that payments are working as they should.

3. Monitoring returns against Nacha rules

Companies are responsible for monitoring their ACH return rate against Nacha’s return risk thresholds, per the following three categories:

  • For Unauthorized Debits, including R05, R07, R10, R29, and R51, the return rate can be no higher than 0.5%
  • For Administrative Returns, including R02, R03, and R04, the return rate can be no higher than 3.0%
  • For Overall Returns, the return rate must be 15% or less

A company’s failure to stay within these thresholds can impact their ability to take on new bank partners and endanger their ability to participate in the ACH network at all. Modern Treasury now tracks each client’s ACH return rate automatically, to help companies keep tabs on where they stand.

A Robust Solution for ACH Returns

As they scale, many companies continue trying to manage ACH returns manually or they try to build a solution in-house. However, growth can put an incredible burden on companies that go either route, and the resources required (not to mention the risk involved) just don’t add up over the long term.

Modern Treasury was built to help companies simplify payment operations—and that includes both preventing ACH returns from happening in the first place, and handling complex cases when customers do inevitably get returns. Reach out to learn more.

Managing ACH Returns at Scale (2024)

FAQs

How to handle ACH returns? ›

Since ACH returns have a turnaround time of 2 banking days for most transactions, dishonored returns must also be resolved in a timely manner. Returns that meet the above criteria must be sent in within 5 banking days from the return settlement date.

What is the R10 rule for Nacha? ›

Under the rule, how will R10 be defined? R10 is defined as “Customer Advises Originator is Not Known to Receiver and/or Originator is Not Authorized by Receiver to Debit Receiver's Account” and will be used for: Receiver does not know the identity of the Originator. Receiver has no relationship with the Originator.

What is the maximum return rate for ACH? ›

Overall Returns must stay below 15 percent. This percentage is calculated based on ACH debit returns for the preceding 60 days and includes all return reason codes.

How many times can an ACH be returned? ›

ACH rules stipulate that when you request an ACH payment from your client's bank account and your payment is rejected due to insufficient or uncollected funds, you can retry the payment two more times. But you have to retry this payment within 180 days from the settlement date of the initial entry.

What is the 60 day rule for ACH? ›

Under the ACH rules, the customer's bank is obliged to refund the debits without question, as long as the request was received within 60 days from the NACHA transaction date. (In contrast, businesses have only 2 days to request a return.)

What are the problems with ACH payments? ›

Limitations. One drawback of ACH transfers is that they settle more slowly—it takes up to a few days — which could be an issue for businesses that require quick access to funds. ACH debits might not clear if the payer's account lacks sufficient funds, leading to delayed payments and potential fees.

What is the 5 day rule for NACHA? ›

An Originator or ODFI must still transmit a Reversal in such time that it is made available to the RDFI within 5 banking days following the Settlement Date of the Erroneous Entry.

What is the difference between ACH and NACHA? ›

ACH (Automated Clearing House) is an electronic network for moving money between US bank accounts, while Nacha (The National Automated Clearing House Association) is the governing body that oversees the ACH network and enforces rules and regulations to protect sensitive information.

What are the changes for NACHA in 2024? ›

HERNDON, Virginia, March 18, 2024 – Nacha members have approved a set of rules intended to reduce the incidence of frauds, such as business email compromise (BEC), that make use of credit-push payments. The new rules establish a base-level of ACH payment monitoring on all parties in the ACH Network (except consumers).

Can an ACH be returned for insufficient funds? ›

Common causes of ACH returns include insufficient funds, incorrect account information, fraud, errors, or if the account owner asks their bank to place a stop payment on the transfer.

How many ACH transactions per day? ›

Nacha estimates that an average of nearly 10 million ACH payments per day are being delivered in these new files on Monday through Thursday; an average of more than 50 million ACH payments are being delivered on Fridays.

What is the risk of ACH? ›

ACH credit risk arises with an ACH credit and when one party fails to make a payment that is required to settle under the ACH credit contract. This might occur when a company suffers large financial losses such as going bankrupt.

Which bank has the highest ACH limit? ›

What bank has the highest ACH transfer limit? Chase Bank has the highest ACH transfer limit at $10k, or it can be $25k daily. Second is Wells Fargo, which, if you have a good relationship with the bank, allows for up to $5k a day. Then there is Bank of America which provides $1k per transaction.

Can an ACH return be reversed? ›

Yes. Banks can reverse ACH payments under certain circ*mstances. This process is known as an ACH return or ACH reversal. Still, just because banks can reverse ACH transactions doesn't mean they always will.

What is the difference between CCD and PPD in ACH? ›

The most common ACH SEC Codes are CCD and PPD. CCD's are Corporate Credit or Debit transactions and are used to originate transactions to or from Corporate Accounts only. PPD's are Prearranged Payment or Deposit transactions and are used to originate transactions to Consumer Accounts only.

How do I accept payments through ACH? ›

How to Accept ACH Payments
  1. Open a business account.
  2. Select a provider and enable ACH payments for your Point of Sale (POS). ...
  3. Request customer authorization. ...
  4. If your customer will initiate the payment, send them your routing and account number. ...
  5. If you'll initiate the payment, collect your customer's bank information.
Dec 4, 2023

How do I get customers to pay through ACH? ›

Let them know how the problem can be avoided with an ACH payment. (Bonus recommendation) Provide instruction on how to pay by ACH. Leverage the one communication your customer probably pays attention to: the bill or invoice. Lobby to have clear ACH payment instructions provided on bills/invoices and your website.

Can an ACH be refunded? ›

Refunds for ACH Direct Debit payments : Stripe: Help & Support. ACH Direct Debit refunds operate differently than credit card refunds: Refunds for ACH Direct Debit payments must be initiated within 180 days from the date of the original payment. A refund can only be processed after the payment process has completed.

How long do you have to reject an ACH? ›

The National Automated Clearing House Association (NACHA) have strict ACH reversal rules. Reversals must occur within five business days of the transaction, and only three situations qualify for approval. These include; If the payment was for the wrong dollar amount.

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