Banking's foundational secret: your "balance" is not money the bank keeps for you. It's a ledger entry — an IOU ("I Owe You": a written promise to pay) from the bank to you. Once you truly get that, every chapter on this site — cards, SWIFT, UPI, stablecoins — becomes the same story: whose ledger changes, and when.
Meet Alice. She hands her bank $500 in cash. The bank does not put those notes in a box with her name on it. It writes one line in its notebook: "we owe Alice $500." A written promise like that is called an IOU (from the phrase "I Owe You"). Alice traded her cash for an IOU.
That notebook line is her account balance. A bank is a licensed, audited, insured keeper of millions of such lines. Every payment Alice will ever make — card tap, transfer, phone wallet — works by editing notebook lines like hers. This chapter shows whose notebooks exist, who is allowed to edit them, and when. Alice and her friend Bob carry the story from here to the end of the page.
Alice's app and the bank's notebook describe one single fact. The app is a window; the notebook row is the reality.
Alice pays Bob $100. Watch the same payment get harder as the ledgers multiply — this four-step relay is secretly the entire payments industry.
The same story as the animation, frozen on paper. Alice pays Bob $100 — here is every notebook after the dust settles.
One $100 payment between two banks touches three separate ledgers. Here's the same payment written the way the system actually records it:
Three notebooks changed. Bank A crossed out $100 next to Alice's name. The central bank moved $100 from Bank A's page to Bank B's page. Bank B wrote $100 next to Bob's name. Nobody carried anything anywhere. When people say "money moved," this is all that ever happened — three lists were edited in the right order, and each list-keeper vouches for their edit.
Eight terms carry this whole subject. Each one gets a plain definition, a concrete example, and the reason it matters. Get these eight and no payments conversation can lose you.
A list of accounts and amounts that somebody keeps and vouches for. That somebody matters more than the list.
Why it matters: every chapter on this site reduces to two questions — whose ledger, and when does it change.
Any record saying one party owes another. Not slang — the actual building block of banking: your balance, a banknote, and bank reserves are all IOUs issued by somebody.
Why it matters: read every balance as "who owes whom, and how credible is the promise?" and payments stops being mysterious.
The amount your bank owes you on demand. Not money stored for you. A debt the bank must pay whenever you ask.
Why it matters: bank failures, deposit insurance, and "is my money safe in a fintech app?" only make sense once you see a balance as an IOU.
Balances that banks hold in their own accounts at the central bank. You bank at Bank A; Bank A banks at the central bank.
Why it matters: "the money moved" between banks always means "reserves moved at the central bank." There is no other move.
The institution that prints cash, holds every bank's reserve account, and keeps the one ledger everyone trusts. The Fed (Federal Reserve, US), the ECB (European Central Bank), the RBI (Reserve Bank of India), the Bank of England (UK).
Why it matters: central-bank money is the only "final" money in the system. Everything else is a claim on somebody.
Exchanging and checking the payment records so both sides agree on the numbers — before any money moves.
Why it matters: most of the waiting in payments is clearing, not moving. The "2–3 business days" you've cursed at is mostly bookkeeping schedules.
The moment value really changes hands on the final ledger — reserves at the central bank, or cash, or a delivered asset.
Why it matters: until settlement, somebody is extending credit and carrying risk. Finding that somebody explains most payment fees.
The legal point after which a payment cannot be unwound — not by the payer, not by a court, not even in a bankruptcy.
Why it matters: "when is this truly mine?" is a legal question, and rails compete on the answer. Card chargebacks exist because card payments stay reversible for months.
Having spendable money today — as opposed to wealth you can't touch until you sell something. A bank can be rich and still run out.
Why it matters: the design fight between instant rails (settle now, hold lots of reserves) and batch rails (settle tonight, need less) is entirely an argument about liquidity.
Too many depositors demanding their IOUs be paid out at the same time. Banks keep only a fraction ready, so a run can kill even a healthy-looking bank.
Why it matters: runs are the reason deposit insurance and the central bank's emergency-lending role exist. Regulators now plan for runs at app speed.
Every balance is someone's IOU. What changes is who the someone is. Climbing the ladder = fewer promises between you and final money.
Three ledgers, live. Make payments and watch what each book records. Then hit settle and see the only edit that counts.
"Cash is the government's IOU. Your balance is the bank's."
Physical cash is a claim on the central bank. Your account balance is a commercial bank's promise to give you cash if you ask. That's why a bank failure is terrifying — your "money" is literally the bank's IOU — and why deposit insurance (run by bodies like the FDIC — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation — in the US, and the DICGC — Deposit Insurance and Credit Guarantee Corporation — in India) exists: it makes the IOU credible up to a limit.
"Banks have bank accounts too."
Every bank holds an account at the central bank (the Fed in the US, the ECB — European Central Bank — in the euro area, the RBI — Reserve Bank of India) filled with reserves — the special money banks use to pay each other. When Bank A "sends money" to Bank B, what actually moves is reserves on the central bank's ledger. The central bank is the ledger of last resort: the one book everyone trusts.
"Done means the central bank says done."
Settlement is the moment the reserves actually move. Finality is the legal guarantee that the move can't be unwound. Everything before that moment is promises — messages, authorizations, IOUs in flight. Half the risk in payments lives in the gap between "the message arrived" and "the money settled." (You'll meet this gap again in cards, SWIFT, and instant rails.)
"Settle every payment, or settle the difference?"
Two designs exist. RTGS (Real-Time Gross Settlement — Fedwire, TARGET2, RTGS India): every payment settles one-by-one, instantly, finally. Safe but liquidity-hungry. Deferred net settlement (ACH — the US's Automated Clearing House — card networks, checks): pile up the day's payments, cancel out offsetting ones, settle only the net difference tonight. Efficient — but until tonight, banks are extending each other credit. That credit gap is why batch rails need rules, collateral and caps.
"They don't. They're made to behave."
Banks deal with each other because the system forces trustworthiness: capital requirements (owners lose first), collateral pledged against exposures, regulation and supervision, and the central bank as emergency lender. When you hear "licensed institution" anywhere on this site, this machinery is what the license buys. It's also exactly what crypto tried to replace with code — see the blockchain chapter next.
"Your fintech app is a ledger on top of a ledger."
A wallet app or neobank showing "your balance" usually holds one big pooled account at a real bank, plus its own internal ledger of who owns which slice. Fast, cheap — and the reason regulators obsess over safeguarding rules: if the fintech's internal ledger and the bank's real ledger disagree, customers discover their money was an IOU on an IOU. (Synapse's 2024 collapse in the US froze ~$265M of customer "balances", with a reported $65–95M gap between the sub-ledgers and the real accounts.)
Every idea on this page is a promise someone keeps. Here is what happens the day someone can't. Three real failures, and one ladder to check where your own money actually stands.
Five questions beginners actually ask, answered without hedging.
Three deeper cuts for the curious: what insurance actually insures, the money-supply layers, and how fintechs hold your funds.