Once your investment and banking accounts are set up, and you've activated online services, you need to keep your account information current. Updating transactions and balances from your financial institution saves time and improves the accuracy of your record keeping. The easiest way to do this is to use One Step Update.
One Step Update is a single access point for almost all online features; you can download transactions and send online payment instructions for multiple accounts, download security quotes, and obtain product updates for your Quicken software.
Click a link below for a brief overview of the different ways that Quicken's online features will help you to work smarter.
- Understanding how Quicken protects your privacy and security
The privacy and security of your personal financial data is of the utmost importance. Learn more about the measures Intuit takes to ensure the privacy and security of your personal information, and about additional steps you can take on your own.
- Updating all my transactions and balances
Whenever you use One Step Update, you retrieve information for all online activated accounts at the currently selected financial institutions.
Transaction information is updated directly into Quicken, and then you can compare your financial institution's records to your own. Typically, when a checks clears the bank or when a credit card purchase is processed, you find out about it the next time you go online. With One Step Update, you can:
- Update the latest cleared transactions and balances for online-enabled bank, credit card, investment, and 401(k) accounts.
- Update the latest cleared transactions and balances for online-enabled bank and credit card accounts.
- Send pending and recurring payments, cancel payments, or update payment status instructions (not all features are supported by all financial institutions).
- Simplify reconciling your monthly statements.
- Send pending online transfers between accounts at the same financial institution.
- Managing my financial institution passwords
Your financial institutions may require you to use passwords to access online services. There are two methods of managing financial institution passwords in Quicken. You can enter each password individually (least convenient), or manage multiple passwords in a vault (most convenient and secure).
Quicken's Password Vault is a secure and convenient way to store multiple financial institution passwords that you can then access with a single master password.
- You can open the Password Vault to add, remove, or change stored passwords at any time.
- When the Password Vault was developed, it went through a rigorous security review.
- The Password Vault uses industry-standard encryption to save your passwords, and it is careful to remove them from memory when they are no longer being used.
Depending on your financial institution, you may be required to change your assigned password the first time you connect to your financial institution. Your assigned password is the one your financial institution sent to you after you signed up for online service. Some financial institutions require multiple passwords, depending on the services and the accounts you use. If yours does, you'll be prompted again to change the next assigned password.
- Working with the Password Vault and with stored passwords
You can change the Vault password or stored (financial institution) passwords at any time. If necessary, you can also completely reset your Password Vault.
- Providing additional authentication requested by my financial institution
As a defense against phishing attacks and other online scams, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) has released new guidelines that require financial institutions to strengthen their customer authentication measures for Internet banking transactions by the end of 2006. As a result, many financial institutions are beginning to require identity verification beyond a customer ID and password when customers request online account access. This additional information is sometimes called multi factor authentication.
When you go online to update your transactions and balances in Quicken, your participating financial institution may request similar identity verification. When you use online setup to add your accounts, Quicken can store the verification information for you to make the download experience more convenient.
For security purposes, financial institutions change the type of authentication they request from time to time (for example, a bank might request you to enter your postal code instead of the year in which you were born). When these changes occur, Quicken prompts you to enter the new information.
Tell me how to do this
- Printing downloaded transactions
From Quicken's Online Center, you can print a list of:
- Current transactions (downloaded transactions not yet compared to your account register or transaction list)
- Historical transactions (you can include any transactions you have downloaded into the current data file, even if they do not appear in the Online Center).
- Customizing online update options
- Communicating with your financial institution
If you have questions about your downloaded transactions or about any of your holdings and balances (for investment accounts)
contact the financial institution directly. You can call your financial institution, or you can send e-mail from the Online Center (if your financial institution supports the e-mail feature).