Goldwater Bank
Positive PayOnline Banking Enrollment
Login

PersonalBusiness BankingHome Loans
About
LocationsLake Havasu Branch
Open an Account
Banner Icon

Privacy Policy

Banner Footer
FactsWHAT DOES Goldwater Bank, N.A., DO WITH YOUR PERSONAL INFORMATION?
Why?Financial companies choose how they share your personal information. Federal law gives consumers the right to limit some but not all sharing. Federal law also requires us to tell you how we collect, share, and protect your personal information. Please read this notice carefully to understand what we do.
What?The types of personal information we collect and share depend on the product or service you have with us. This information can include:
  • Social Security number and income
  • Account balance and payment history
  • Credit history and credit scores
How?All financial companies need to share customers' personal information to run their everyday business. In the section below, we list the reasons financial companies can share their customers' personal information; the reasons Goldwater Bank, N.A., chooses to share; and whether you can limit this sharing.
Reasons we can share your personal information:Does Goldwater Bank, N.A., share?Can you limit this sharing?
For our everyday business purposes such as to process your transactions, maintain your account(s), respond to court orders and legal investigations, or report to credit bureausYesNo
For our marketing purposes to offer our products and services to you.YesNo
For joint marketing with other financial companiesNoWe Don't Share
For our affiliates everyday business purposes information about your transactions and experiencesNoWe Don't Share
For our affiliates everyday business purposes information about your creditworthinessNoWe Don't Share
For non-affiliates to market to youNoWe Don't Share
Who we are
Who is providing this notice?Goldwater Bank, N.A.
How does Goldwater Bank, N.A. protect my personal information?To protect your personal information from unauthorized access and use, we use security measures that comply with federal law. These measures include computer safeguards and secured files and buildings. We restrict access to your personal information to only those employees who need to know. We require all companies with whom we share your information to keep it confidential.
How?All financial companies need to share customers' personal information to run their everyday business. In the section below, we list the reasons financial companies can share their customers' personal information; the reasons Goldwater Bank, N.A. chooses to share; and whether you can limit this sharing.
How does Goldwater Bank, N.A. collect my personal information?We collect your personal information, for example, when you
  • open an account or deposit money
  • pay your bills or apply for a loan
  • use your credit or debit card
We also collect your personal information from others, such as credit bureaus, affiliates, or other companies.
Why can't I limit all sharing?Federal law gives you the right to limit only
  • sharing for affiliates' everyday business purposes - information about your creditworthiness
  • affiliates from using your information to market to you
  • sharing for nonaffiliates to market to you
WordDefinition
AffiliatesFinancial companies choose how they share your personal information. Federal law gives consumers the right to limit some but not all sharing. Federal law also requires us to tell you how we collect, share, and protect your personal information. Please read this notice carefully to understand what we do.
Non-AffiliatesThe types of personal information we collect and share depend on the product or service you have with us. This information can include:
  • Social Security number and income
  • Account balance and payment history
  • Credit history and credit scores
Joint MarketingAll financial companies need to share customers' personal information to run their everyday business. In the section below, we list the reasons financial companies can share their customers' personal information; the reasons Goldwater Bank, N.A. chooses to share; and whether you can limit this sharing
OTHER IMPORTANT INFORMATIONYou can help protect your privacy by using caution when disclosing your account numbers, social security numbers, etc. to other persons. If someone calls you, explains the call is on behalf of the bank and asks for your account number or any other identifying or account-related information, you should beware. Goldwater Bank, N.A. does not ask bank customers for personal information via email or phone. Anyone who receives an email or phone call that claims to be from Goldwater Bank, N.A. and asks for account information should consider it to be a fraudulent attempt to obtain their personal account data and should not follow the instructions in the email or over the phone.

Security Statement

Our website brings together a combination of industry-approved security technologies to protect data for the bank and for you, our customer. It features a VeriSign-issued Digital ID for the bank's Internet Service Provider hosting our website, Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol for data encryption, and a router and firewall to regulate the inflow and outflow of server traffic.

Secure Data Transfer

Once a server session is established on an https secure page, the user and the server are in a secured environment. Because the server has been certified as a 128-bit secure server by VeriSign, data traveling between the user and the server is encrypted with Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protocol. With SSL, data that travels between the bank and customer is encrypted and can only be decrypted with the public and private key pair. In short, the bank's server issues a public key to the end user's browser and creates a temporary private key. These two keys are the only combination possible for that session. When the session is complete, the keys expire and the whole process starts over when a new end user makes a server session.

Router and Firewall

Secure forms must filter through a router and firewall before they are permitted to reach the server. A router, a piece of hardware, works in conjunction with the firewall, a piece of software, to block and direct traffic coming to the server. The configuration begins by disallowing ALL traffic and then opens holes only when necessary to process acceptable data requests, such as retrieving web pages or sending customer requests to the bank.

Using the above technologies, your Internet loan application and check reorder transactions are secure.

Identity Theft

It is important to be proactive in understanding and reporting Identity Theft. Please visit https://www.identitytheft.gov and see a step by step plan of action to limit damage to your personal information.

FDIC Warns of Fraudulent Emails - September 2, 2011

On September 2, 2011, the FDIC issued a warning to banks and consumers regarding fraudulent emails claiming to be from the FDIC.

The fraudulent messages state:

"Dear clients,

Your account ACH and WIRE transaction have been temporarily suspended for security reasons due to the expiration of your security version. To download and install the newest installations read the document (pdf) attached below.

As soon as it is setup, you transaction abilities will be fully restored.

Best Regards, Online Security department, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation."

The e-mails contain an attachment "FDIC_document.zip" that will likely release malicious software if opened. These e-mails and attachments are fraudulent and were not sent by the FDIC. Recipients should consider these e-mails an attempt to collect personal or confidential information, or to load malicious software onto end users' computers. Recipients should NOT open the attachment.

Financial institutions and consumers should be aware that these fraudulent e-mails may be modified over time with other subject lines, sender names, and narratives. The FDIC does not directly contact consumers, nor does the FDIC request bank customers to install software upgrades. Information about counterfeit items, cyber-fraud incidents, and other fraudulent activity may be forwarded to the FDIC's Cyber-Fraud and Financial Crimes Section, 3501 North Fairfax Drive, CH-11034, Arlington, Virginia 22226, or transmitted electronically to alert@fdic.gov. Questions related to federal deposit insurance or consumer issues should be submitted to the FDIC using an online form that can be accessed at http://www2.fdic.gov/starsmail/index.asp.

The ECOA prohibits creditors from discriminating against credit applicants on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, marital status, age (providing the applicant has the capacity to enter into a binding contract); because all or part of the applicants income derives from any public assistance program; or, because the applicant has in good faith exercised any right under the Consumer Credit Protection Act.

The Home Mortgage Disclosure Act, enacted by Congress in 1975 and made permanent in 1988, requires depository and non-depository lenders to collect and publicly disclose information about housing-related loans and applications for such loans, including several applicant/borrower characteristics. This includes geographic distribution of loans and applications; ethnicity, race, sex, and income of applicants and borrowers; and information about loan approvals and denials. HMDA is implemented by the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation C (12 CFR Part 203) and a staff commentary (12 CFR Part 203, Supp. I).

Goldwater Droplet Banner
Banking Rates