How issue files actually move, where reverse positive pay fits, and the daily habits that make either one stop altered cheques instead of merely existing.
Positive pay is the single most effective control against cheque fraud — and the one most often switched on, half-configured, and quietly neglected until the day it matters. This explainer covers what positive pay is, how the issue file actually moves, where reverse positive pay fits, and the small daily habits that decide whether it protects you or merely exists.
When a cheque arrives at your bank for payment, the bank’s default posture is to pay it. Clearing systems verify that the account exists and the funds are there — not that you actually wrote the cheque for that amount to that payee. A washed cheque with an altered amount, or a counterfeit printed on commodity stock with your account number, sails through default clearing. Positive pay replaces “pay unless told otherwise” with “pay only what the issuer has confirmed.”
Basic positive pay matches cheque number and amount only. Payee positive pay also matches the payee name — which is exactly what cheque washing attacks alter. Fraudsters have adapted to basic positive pay; a washed cheque often keeps the original number and amount and changes only the name. If your bank offers payee matching, the incremental cost is small and the protection gap it closes is the one being actively exploited.
With reverse positive pay the bank sends you the list of presented cheques each morning and you confirm or return them. It is cheaper and needs no issue file — but it inverts the default: if you do nothing, items pay. It suits low cheque volumes with a disciplined daily reviewer. The moment volume grows or the reviewer takes a vacation, the control dissolves. Treat it as a stepping stone, not a destination.
| Failure | What it looks like | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Stale files | Issue file sent weekly while cheques clear daily | Automate file generation at print time |
| Rubber-stamping | Every exception approved in bulk at 4:58 PM | Default-to-return plus a real reviewer |
| Number-only matching | Washed payee names clear untouched | Upgrade to payee positive pay |
| Manual entry | Typos create false exceptions, then fatigue | Generate files from the cheque register, never by hand |
The hardest part of positive pay is not the concept — it is producing an accurate issue file every single day. When cheque printing and mailing run through PaymentsNow, the issue data already exists in the live cheque register the moment a run is approved, and custom positive pay support is built into our Premium plans. Voids, stops, and reissues flow into the same record automatically — the homework does itself. Combined with controlled cheque stock and approval rules, you get layered protection instead of a single tripwire.
Canadian banks typically price it as a monthly fee plus cents per item — almost always less than one prevented fraud incident per decade. Payee matching costs slightly more than number-and-amount matching and is worth the difference.
Low-volume accounts are attractive targets precisely because nobody is watching daily. Reverse positive pay or a block on all cheque activity (for accounts that should never write cheques) are the right-sized tools.
You approve them before the cutoff and they pay normally. With clean, automated issue files, legitimate exceptions become rare enough that each one gets genuine attention.
Upload a file, approve the run, and we print, mail, track, and reconcile every cheque. Your first five are free.