Float: What It Is and How It Works
What is float?
Float is the temporary double-counting of the same funds within the banking system due to delays in processing transactions—most commonly paper checks. When a deposit is credited to a payee’s account but the payer’s bank has not yet completed the transfer, the amount can appear in both places for a short time. While float is less common today because of electronic payments, it still affects cash flow and money-supply measures.
Types of float
- Holdover float: Delays that arise at processing institutions (weekends, seasonal backlogs).
- Transportation float: Delays caused by physical movement of payment items (weather, air-traffic disruptions).
The Federal Reserve processes a large share of checks and observes weekly and seasonal patterns in float, which it uses when implementing monetary policy.
How float is measured
Basic formula:
Float = available balance − book balance
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Average daily float is commonly used to gauge the typical amount outstanding over a period:
1. Multiply the float outstanding each day (or for each interval) by the number of days it remained outstanding.
2. Sum those products for the period.
3. Divide by the number of days in the period.
Example:
A company has $15,000 of float for the first 14 days and $19,000 for the last 17 days of a 31-day month.
Average daily float = [($15,000 × 14) + ($19,000 × 17)] ÷ 31 = $533,000 ÷ 31 = $17,193.55
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Practical uses and risks
- Short-term cash management: Individuals and businesses can intentionally time payments or deposits to gain a few days of liquidity (for example, writing a check before a paycheck posts).
- Corporate practices: Large firms and banks may speed deposits or delay payments to earn interest on temporarily held funds. When confined to their own funds this is legal.
- Legal risk: Using others’ funds or deliberately overdrawing to exploit float can constitute fraud. Historical examples (e.g., E.F. Hutton) show large-scale misuse can lead to criminal charges.
How technology is changing float
Electronic payments, direct deposit, check imaging, and faster settlement systems have greatly reduced the frequency and size of float. Declining check volumes and improved payment infrastructure mean float plays a shrinking role in modern finance, though brief delays still occur.
Typical duration and common examples
- Typical gap: Often one to two days, but it varies by institution and payment method.
- Common scenario: An employer gives a check that’s deposited and credited to an employee’s account before the employer’s bank completes the transfer—creating a short window of double-counting.
Bottom line
Float is a legacy byproduct of delayed payment processing that can temporarily inflate available balances and, at scale, affect money-supply metrics. While technological advances have reduced its prevalence, understanding float remains useful for cash management and for recognizing the operational and legal limits of leveraging short-term timing differences.