Wednesday 26 February 2014

Writer's Blues: Now the Bank Will Not Accept My Royalty Cheques

One reason for the neglect of this blog has been the fact that I have been busy writing 'what if?' history books in an effort to spread the word about this aspect of history but also to make some money.  Back in September 2012 when I first started doing this, I noted that whilst it was easy to receive royalties from Amazon for books you sold in most countries, for those sold in the USA it was a lot harder: http://rooksmoor.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/kindling-some-e-books.html  The US government takes 30% of any royalties earned in the USA unless you are a US tax payer.  Unlike with sales in other countries, Amazon makes it harder still, by having a threshold of US$100 before it will pay the royalties.  For other countries, until late last year there was a threshold of around €10 before they made a payment, which meant that for some countries months and months could go by before you received the small crumbs of cash.  That limit has been taken off and you get paid whatever you have earned, even if it is equivalent to 30p.

Once I topped the US$100 mark a cheque (or 'check' as the Americans call it) was sent to me in US$, though in fact it just said 'dollars' and nothing bar Amazon's address showed that it was US$ and not Canadian, Australian or Hong Kong dollars instead.  I then had to take this to my bank, pay a £6 fee and wait six weeks while it was 'negotiated'.  By the end of the process I was lucky if I got 65% of what I had originally earned in the USA and am still liable to further tax unless I register as a US as well as a UK taxpayer.  This was very frustrating given that the USA has always been my largest market.  The situation has now got worse.  My bank, the Nationwide Building Society has started refusing cheques below US$250 and indeed returned one I had submitted to them last month and I believed was being processed.  I have contacted Amazon to see if they will hold on to my US payments until they exceed US$250 after the royalty deduction, but knowing them, they will simply ignore this and plough on saying their way is the only acceptable one.  This leaves me accumulating cheques with which I can do nothing so the 70% remaining from my sales will now go to Amazon.  It seems incredible that Amazon sticks to one way of paying these royalties and a non-electronic way which is quickly fading from usage certainly in the UK.  This week I wrote the first cheque I had written since January 2013.

I am at a loss what to do.  Cheques expire after six months and I am left trying to find a bank which can cash these cheques.  It seems ridiculous that I have to open an account at a different back just to get to my money.  There is never any point in asking Amazon to do anything and as I have noted before, despite their global reach their focus is simply on US writers with the rest of us largely being inconvenient and stupid in not understanding the 'proper way' these things should be done.  However, the many thousands of us are now earning Amazon a lot more money that we were doing before, simply because they stubbornly adhere to their self-made rules, but I guess that is the way they like it.

P.P. 01/03/2014
Surprisingly Amazon responded to my query and told me how I could alter the cheque payment to an electronic payment so money from US sales now comes the same way as for the other countries.  Why this is not the default as it is for all the other countries, I have no idea.  However, fortunately it has resolved my difficulty.  I did find that HSBC will take foreign cheques of less than US$250 so paid the outstanding cheque into an old account I had there, fortunately.  They charge £6 per transaction just like Nationwide.

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