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Don't some states have laws that require businesses to accept cash?


you're required to accept cash as a payment for a debt (at least that's what is says on the bill, "this note is legal tender for all debts, public and private")

but you can't be compelled to provide a service for someone who is carrying cash only, unless something changed recently


> you're required to accept cash as a payment for a debt (at least that's what is says on the bill, "this note is legal tender for all debts, public and private")

Does it mean that? Just because it is legal tender doesn't mean you have to accept it.


You do for debts, but paying for a good or service isn't a debt.


In some states, yes, you have to accept it.


Yes, it does. That is the definition of "legal tender". Usually there are some restrictions on the amount and the denominations, so you don't have to accept a truck full of 1 cent coins.


As I understand it as a layman, if:

* The seller does not state they do not take cash before the transaction happens,

* And the buyer attempts to pay for the transaction after the fact with cash in good faith,

* And the sold goods cannot be returned to their original condition prior to sale,

Then the buyer is okay (FSVO okay) to leave and go about his day because the seller refused to take money that was presented in good faith by the buyer. Because cash, at least in the US, is "legal tender for all debts public and private" and a transaction to which you owe money is a form of debt.

Obligatory not a lawyer and not an accountant disclaimer. I'm way too lazy to go and properly research and cite this.


This was definitely a meme going around during covid as more places were going cashless

In real life there's not a lot of cases where someone gives you goods before you pay, and anywhere i've been to that don't accept cash clearly posts "this is a cashless business" (sweetgreen and the like, SF/NYC, YMMV) so good luck making the argument that you're entitled to your free salad


Yeah, as I said if the buyer makes a good faith payment in cash and if the seller didn't inform him beforehand they don't take cash then the onus is presumably on the seller to take it or leave it because the buyer is willing to do his part and make the pie whole.

Usually this isn't a problem because "We don't take cash." signs are prominently posted, but we are speaking in the hypothetical after all.


Yes, it seems like a lot of misunderstandings here hinge on not paying attention to or making incorrect assumptions about the word "debt". You cannot refuse cash payments for an existing debt, but you can make non cash payment a condition for engaging in a transaction at all.




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