![]() ![]() She said whatever she was looking at said business. ![]() So she looked further and asked if I had a business account or a personal account. I told her to stay on the line while I tried a login from scratch with the new ID/PW. I explained how it didn't "stick" the first time and the lady on the phone said "let me check further." Turns out there was SOMETHING ELSE also wrong so she fixed that. Next time I tried to log in I got an immediate email just like the first one telling me my access was suspended! After another 20 minutes on hold we went through the same process. I was given a temp password to use with my current id and was able to log in, change my PW and then my ID and view my account data. On the phone I was told that WF just changed some of their ID/Password rules and that is what kicked me out. Very annoying! I finally figured out that "0#' in answer to all questions gets you to a real person (after a 20-30 minute wait and continuous reminders that you can do all this on their web page - yeah, right.) That annoying phone number wanted all the same information the web page asked for and also refused to recognize it. Contributions Talk Contents move to sidebar hide (Top) 1 History. After trying the various ways it offered me to prove myself and change my password it finally gave me a phone number to call. Create account Log in Pages for logged out editors learn more. Going to their web page didn't help - it didn't acknowledge that I existed and could not find my mortgage account number. Took me 'till today to get it squared away. This just happened to me the day before yesterday. Or sooner, if there is 24/7 phone support. That's a bit harder to "verify" - or disprove by successfully logging on.Īnd yes, call them tomorrow morning. Often the scam emails warn that the account will/might be suspended "unless" one clicks on the link, etc. Only use their *regular* website access, the one you've used in the past. So FIRST: DO NOT CLICK ON ANY LINK IN THE EMAIL, and do NOT go to any website address that email provides (and don't call any number in that email, either).ĭid you try to log in? Obviously, if you can, then the email was a scam. There are indeed lots of emails like this that are scams. Whats my best move? just call them up to verify? As a safety measure, we have suspended your access to Wells Fargo Online® because we detected a possible unauthorized attempt to sign on to your account.ĭoing a quick google search, this could be a scam. ![]() See our Deposit Account Agreement for more information.Account security is a top priority for Wells Fargo. At our discretion, and dependent on the timing of our receipt of the direct deposit instructions, we may make funds from these qualifying direct deposits available to you up to 2 days early. Early Pay for access to your paycheck up to two days early with direct depositĮarly Pay is automatically available to checking, savings (excluding IRA savings) and money market customers who receive qualifying ACH direct deposits.Free checking: No monthly fees and no minimum balance.Google, Google Pay, and Android are trademarks of Google LLC. Samsung Pay is a registered trademark of Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd. Venmo and PayPal are registered trademarks of PayPal, Inc. In addition, purchases made using third-party payment accounts (services such as Venmo® and PayPal®, who also provide P2P payments) may not be eligible for cash back rewards. 1% cash back on up to $3,000 in monthly debit card purchasesĪTM transactions, the purchase of money orders or other cash equivalents, cash over portions of point-of-sale transactions, Peer-to-Peer (P2P) payments (such as Apple Pay Cash), online sports betting and internet gambling transactions, and loan payments or account funding made with your debit card are not eligible for cash back rewards. ![]()
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