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Nearly two million Social Security recipients in the Midwest, mostly senior citizens and people with disabilities, will receive information about a new prepaid debit card option for federal benefits with their monthly checks in August.
The Direct Express® Debit MasterCard® card – designed as a safe, convenient alternative to paper checks – will be introduced by the U.S. Department of the Treasury's Financial Management Service (FMS) to Social Security recipients in Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota, and Wisconsin.
The Direct Express card is a new option for federal beneficiaries who do not have a bank account, but are looking for a no-cost or low-cost alternative to using check cashing facilities and carrying large amounts of cash. There is no sign-up fee and no bank account or credit check is required to enroll. Cardholders can make purchases, pay bills and get cash at thousands of ATM and retail locations nationwide.
Treasury has engaged a financial agent – Dallas-based Comerica Bank – to issue this nationally available card exclusively for payment of federal benefits.
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- Nearly two million Social Security and Supplemental Security (SSI) recipients in the Midwestern states, mostly senior citizens and people with disabilities, will receive information about the new Direct Express card with their monthly checks in August.
- About 4 million Social Security and SSI recipients nationally (approximately 800,000 in the Midwestern states) do not have bank accounts and, until now, have had to rely on paper check payments.
- About 10.5 million senior citizens, people with disabilities and others still rely on paper checks for their Social Security and SSI payments.
- Last year, 700,000 Social Security and SSI paper checks were reported lost or stolen and the payments had to be reissued.
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