Talk of The Villages Florida

Talk of The Villages Florida (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/)
-   The Villages, Florida, General Discussion (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/)
-   -   Safety Deposit Boxes?? (https://www.talkofthevillages.com/forums/villages-florida-general-discussion-73/safety-deposit-boxes-360789/)

Michael G. 08-20-2025 09:20 AM

Safety Deposit Boxes??
 
Do you use them?
How safe do you think they are?
From what I read, there is no federal control over, or what banks do with them.

Attention Required! | Cloudflare

HappyTraveler 08-20-2025 09:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael G. (Post 2454984)
Do you use them?
How safe do you think they are?
From what I read, there is no federal control over, or what banks do with them.

I have one basically because it was free for one year when I opened a bank acct here. It renews soon for, I believe, $35 p/yr. Price is fine.

I'm on the fence about it. The likelihood of fire or theft at my home are both very, very small. So, I may just shift what's in there to a safe place at home. I've never loved the idea of somebody else having possession of my worldly goods.

Quote:

How safe do you think they are?
It's almost amusing. I bank here at a small branch of a national bank. The vault door is wide open with no barrier stopping anyone from walking right in (although they'd been seen doing so) and there is no security guard in the branch. Does that answer your question?

Smalley 08-20-2025 10:35 AM

Safety Deposit Boxes are not 100% safe. Theft can occur by a bank employee on rare occastions. We have one of them....free with minimum balance at our bank but we talk about installing a fire proof home safe to replace it.

HappyTraveler 08-20-2025 10:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Smalley (Post 2455020)
Safety Deposit Boxes are not 100% safe. Theft can occur by a bank employee on rare occastions. We have one of them....free with minimum balance at our bank but we talk about installing a fire proof home safe to replace it.

For sure, what people ought to do is keep a dated list of what's in there along with a photo taken from their phone.

ElDiabloJoe 08-20-2025 11:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Smalley (Post 2455020)
Safety Deposit Boxes are not 100% safe. Theft can occur by a bank employee on rare occastions. We have one of them....free with minimum balance at our bank but we talk about installing a fire proof home safe to replace it.

There are varying levels of fire resistant, but there is no "fireproof."

ElDiabloJoe 08-20-2025 11:33 AM

May I recommend you read Post #2 of this thread: https://www.talkofthevillages.com/fo...ight=cash+safe

vintageogauge 08-20-2025 11:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HappyTraveler (Post 2454990)
I have one basically because it was free for one year when I opened a bank acct here. It renews soon for, I believe, $35 p/yr. Price is fine.

I'm on the fence about it. The likelihood of fire or theft at my home are both very, very small. So, I may just shift what's in there to a safe place at home. I've never loved the idea of somebody else having possession of my worldly goods.


It's almost amusing. I bank here at a small branch of a national bank. The vault door is wide open with no barrier stopping anyone from walking right in (although they'd been seen doing so) and there is no security guard in the branch. Does that answer your question?

They can't get into the safety deposit boxes, it takes 2 keys none of which are in the vault. I have never heard of anyone losing anything in them except in the movies. They are safer than your home for sure.

Michael G. 08-20-2025 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vintageogauge (Post 2455043)
They can't get into the safety deposit boxes, it takes 2 keys none of which are in the vault. I have never heard of anyone losing anything in them except in the movies. They are safer than your home for sure.

I can't believe the bank doesn't have master keys to get into all the boxes.

CoachKandSportsguy 08-20-2025 12:11 PM

they do not have your keys to steal from your box! if you lose your keys, there is a fee to drill out the lock and replace it.

Come on people, . . too many tic tok videos?

HappyTraveler 08-20-2025 12:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Michael G. (Post 2455044)
I can't believe the bank doesn't have master keys to get into all the boxes.

Precisely. So, let's have some fun here b/c this a forum where conversation and explorations are to be had. **NOTE: These are all very low probability.*

The ways contents could be taken from boxes - not legitimately.
1) A bank employee, by whatever means (some we probably don't know about)
2) National economy implodes, Fed Gov decides (again) that all privately-held gold should be sold to them so, they create the legal means to inspect the boxes. (Pls don't go off on this one, folks. Not likely, but not impossible)
3) Drills (who needs keys?). With my branch, it would be quite easy for 2 experienced bank robbers to have a ready sign to place in the front door window: Temporarily closed for water repairs - Open tomorrow. I doubt any customer wanting to enter would think anything of it. Then, one guy keeps the employees contained and the other one drills the boxes.
4) The above scenario but, instead of drilling they threaten the manager to use whatever master means the bank has for opening the boxes.

There are probably more ways. But, IMO, the point is there are ways and it's worth people thinking about b/c everyone's risk tolerance is different AND, if the robbers are any good, you will never see those contents again. GONE...

Bogie Shooter 08-20-2025 12:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HappyTraveler (Post 2455049)
Precisely. So, let's have some fun here b/c this a forum where conversation and explorations are to be had. **NOTE: These are all very low probability.*

The ways contents could be taken from boxes - not legitimately.
1) A bank employee, by whatever means (some we probably don't know about)
2) National economy implodes, Fed Gov decides (again) that all privately-held gold should be sold to them so, they create the legal means to inspect the boxes. (Pls don't go off on this one, folks. Not likely, but not impossible)
3) Drills (who needs keys?). With my branch, it would be quite easy for 2 experienced bank robbers to have a ready sign to place in the front door window: Temporarily closed for water repairs - Open tomorrow. I doubt any customer wanting to enter would think anything of it. Then, one guy keeps the employees contained and the other one drills the boxes.
4) The above scenario but, instead of drilling they threaten the manager to use whatever master means the bank has for opening the boxes.

There are probably more ways. But, IMO, the point is there are ways and it's worth people thinking about b/c everyone's risk tolerance is different AND, if the robbers are any good, you will never see those contents again. GONE...

:1rotfl::1rotfl:

HappyTraveler 08-20-2025 12:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bogie Shooter (Post 2455052)
:1rotfl::1rotfl:

Someone has limited capacity for risk assessment and overall bandwidth limitations.
C'est la vie....not my issue.

vintageogauge 08-20-2025 12:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HappyTraveler (Post 2455049)
Precisely. So, let's have some fun here b/c this a forum where conversation and explorations are to be had. **NOTE: These are all very low probability.*

The ways contents could be taken from boxes - not legitimately.
1) A bank employee, by whatever means (some we probably don't know about)
2) National economy implodes, Fed Gov decides (again) that all privately-held gold should be sold to them so, they create the legal means to inspect the boxes. (Pls don't go off on this one, folks. Not likely, but not impossible)
3) Drills (who needs keys?). With my branch, it would be quite easy for 2 experienced bank robbers to have a ready sign to place in the front door window: Temporarily closed for water repairs - Open tomorrow. I doubt any customer wanting to enter would think anything of it. Then, one guy keeps the employees contained and the other one drills the boxes.
4) The above scenario but, instead of drilling they threaten the manager to use whatever master means the bank has for opening the boxes.

There are probably more ways. But, IMO, the point is there are ways and it's worth people thinking about b/c everyone's risk tolerance is different AND, if the robbers are any good, you will never see those contents again. GONE...

You have been watching too many movies.

justjim 08-20-2025 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by HappyTraveler (Post 2454990)
I have one basically because it was free for one year when I opened a bank acct here. It renews soon for, I believe, $35 p/yr. Price is fine.

I'm on the fence about it. The likelihood of fire or theft at my home are both very, very small. So, I may just shift what's in there to a safe place at home. I've never loved the idea of somebody else having possession of my worldly goods.


It's almost amusing. I bank here at a small branch of a national bank. The vault door is wide open with no barrier stopping anyone from walking right in (although they'd been seen doing so) and there is no security guard in the branch. Does that answer your question?

I believe your box is very safe in a bank. No need to have a safe at home unless you are hiding large sums of money from the IRS and you deal with cash.

ElDiabloJoe 08-20-2025 03:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by justjim (Post 2455057)
I believe your box is very safe in a bank. No need to have a safe at home unless you are hiding large sums of money from the IRS and you deal with cash.

Or you have, collect, and use firearms. Or you are smart and protect your vital documents. Or you have experienced civil disorder and understand how cash and guns are vital to survival.


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 06:36 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Search Engine Optimisation provided by DragonByte SEO v2.0.32 (Pro) - vBulletin Mods & Addons Copyright © 2025 DragonByte Technologies Ltd.