bigmacbear: Me in a leather jacket and Hockey Night in Canada ball cap, on a ferry with Puget Sound in background (Default)
bigmacbear ([personal profile] bigmacbear) wrote2005-10-14 04:03 pm

Records Retention

Lately I find myself spending more and more time digging through boxes upon boxes of mundane papers I've collected over the years. Cancelled checks (just to be cute, I labeled most of my envelopes full of these "Cancelled Czechs"), bank statements, credit card statements, paycheck stubs, etc.

The objective of digging through all these papers now is so I don't have to pack and move them later. I'm surprised, though, that the experts in analrecords retention recommend destroying most of these -- bank statements after three months, pay stubs at year end (or once you receive your W-2), etc. I have papers that date back 20 years in little envelopes, filed for posteriorposterity.

The shredder will be busy this weekend, let me tell you.

[identity profile] detailbear.livejournal.com 2005-10-14 10:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Recommend that you save the first pay stub of every raise and put it with your job-search papers (or at least summarize the dates and amounts).

Bank statements/cheques I'm a little more afraid to part with. After 30 or 45 days, you can't argue with the bank, but you may need them to clear up a 10-year old loan that was paid off, but they suddenly try to get you for (indirect experience). There may be a 7-year limit on such things, but you may have to go to court to get them off your back.

Maybe scanner before shredder if that sounds possible?