Zero balance accounts are always tied to a main account, or concentration account, that facilitates transactions and processing, and sweeps money into the zero balance account as needed.
Acronym: ZBA
For example, let’s say you own XYZ Corporation. You have ZBAs set up for each of your departments—for example, human resources, marketing, finance, operations management, and IT. Instead of having to add money to those accounts each time a department needs to pay a vendor or make a purchase, the exact amount of money needed will be automatically moved from the main account to the appropriate ZBA to cover that day’s transactions.
How a Zero Balance Account Works
ZBAs can help businesses streamline operations by allowing them to keep most of their cash in a central location. This minimizes the amount of idle cash they keep on hand and cuts down on administrative costs that would typically be incurred from having to transfer funds manually. You can also think of a ZBA as a “child” account and the main account as a “parent” account. Each time a payment gets posted to a ZBA, that exact amount is dispersed from the parent account to the child account (the same as if your parent gave you $3.71 to buy a gallon of milk at the store). If the ZBA has a positive balance at the end of the day, that money gets swept back to the parent account. In other words, the primary, or parent, account always possesses the money. It only transfers funds to the ZBA on an as-needed basis. And when it does transfer funds, it’s always for the exact amount required—never more than that.
Benefits of a Zero Balance Account
There are several specific benefits to using ZBAs. Here are some notable examples.
Saves Time
Because of the ability to automate transactions, one of the biggest benefits of ZBAs is that they eliminate the need to manually move and track funding to subaccounts. This saves a company time and money they’d otherwise be spending on repositioning funds and tracking balance levels. ZBAs can make it easier for a business to reconcile accounts, audit transaction histories, and get detailed reports on departmental spending.
Limits Banking and Clerical Errors
Juggling several different amounts of cash can get confusing. By keeping funds in one main account—and automating the process—you minimize your business’s chances of accidentally overdrafting, racking up fees, or making clerical mistakes.
Makes It Easier To Audit and Track Spending
ZBAs can help businesses monitor spending for departments, short-term projects, payroll, and more on a granular level. If one entity is overspending, a business may be more likely to spot it with a ZBA than it would if it were manually tracking funds.
Reduces Risk of Fraud
The more bank accounts you have, the more time you have to spend monitoring them for fraudulent activity. But when you only have one main account holding the money, you can lower your chances of being compromised.
Optimizes Cash Flow
Instead of having small amounts of money sitting idle in various accounts, a ZBA can allow you to aggregate these funds and use them to invest and fund other business goals.
Provides More Spending Control
Because ZBAs carry a balance of zero, debit card purchases typically have to be preapproved before they can be made. This, in turn, gives a business more control over spending and allows it to put procedures in place for how it will conduct purchases.
Zero Balance Account vs. Sweep Account
Zero balance accounts and sweep accounts are both designed to maintain a particular balance by transferring funds into and out of a main account. But zero balance accounts are mainly associated with business checking accounts while sweep accounts are tied to brokerage accounts. This chart breaks down more differences between zero balance accounts and sweep accounts: