1. Blank Cheque: A cheque on which the drawer puts his signature and leaves all other columns blank is called a blank cheque.
2. Order Cheque: A cheque which is payable to a particular person or his order is called an order cheque.
3. Bearer Cheque: A cheque which is payable to a person whosoever bears, is called bearer cheque.
5. Multilated Cheque: If a cheque is torn into two or more pieces, it is termed as mutilated cheque.
6. Open Cheque: A cheque
which has not been crossed is called an open cheque. Even if a cheque
is crossed and subsequently the drawer has cancelled the crossing at the
request of the payee and affixes his full signature with the words
“crossing cancelled pay cash”, then it becomes an open cheque.
7. Post Dated Cheque: If a cheque bears a date later than the date of issue, it is termed as post dated cheque.
8. Gift Cheques: Gift
cheques are used for offering presentations on occasions like birthday,
weddings and such other situations. It is available in various
denominations.
9. Crossed Cheque: A
cheque which carries too parallel transverse lines across the face of
the cheque with or without the words “I and co”, is said to be crossed.
10. Traveller’s Cheques: It is an instrument issued by a bank for remittance of money from one place to another.
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