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Business Check Writing Guide — South Dakota Banks

There are 18 active FDIC-insured banks with their main office in South Dakota in our directory, including 2 curated major banks with full routing-number tables. Each entry below links to a printable check writer guide for that bank.

Bank City Offices Assets
Citibank, N.A. Sioux Falls 958 $1,836.44B Check writer →
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. Sioux Falls 4,203 $1,822.69B Check writer →
1st Financial Bank USA Dakota Dunes 2 $1.35B Check writer →
American Bank & Trust Sioux Falls 20 $2.15B Check writer →
BankWest, Inc. Pierre 22 $1.89B Check writer →
CorTrust Bank National Association Mitchell 37 $1.51B Check writer →
Dacotah Bank Aberdeen 32 $4.84B Check writer →
First Bank & Trust Brookings 22 $4.70B Check writer →
First Dakota National Bank Yankton 17 $3.24B Check writer →
First National Bank Fort Pierre 20 $2.07B Check writer →
First PREMIER Bank Sioux Falls 13 $4.15B Check writer →
First Savings Bank Beresford 24 $1.54B Check writer →
Pathward, National Association Sioux Falls 1 $7.56B Check writer →
Pioneer Bank & Trust Belle Fourche 7 $1.01B Check writer →
Plains Commerce Bank Sioux Falls 8 $1.31B Check writer →
Sunrise Banks, National Association Sioux Falls 5 $2.72B Check writer →
The Bancorp Bank, National Association Sioux Falls 1 $9.35B Check writer →
The First National Bank in Sioux Falls Sioux Falls 18 $2.09B Check writer →

About business checks in South Dakota

Checks issued by banks in South Dakota follow the same federal ANSI X9 standard as checks anywhere else in the United States, but a few state-specific considerations are worth knowing. South Dakota follows the Uniform Commercial Code Article 3 (Negotiable Instruments) and Article 4 (Bank Deposits and Collections), which between them define how checks are written, accepted, paid, and disputed. Stop-payment requests, stale-dated check rules, and indorser liability all derive from these UCC articles as adopted by the state.

Most banks headquartered in South Dakota participate in the Federal Reserve's Check 21 image-exchange network, which means a check deposited at a bank in another state is converted to an electronic image and presented to the paying bank within 24 hours, usually faster. The MICR line on every check sold by a South Dakota bank — printed in the standard E-13B font — is what makes that high-speed clearing possible.

If you are setting up a new business and choosing where to bank in South Dakota, consider not just the size of the institution but its specific business banking products: the cost of ordering pre-printed checks, whether Positive Pay is included or sold as an add-on, whether the bank's online banking platform supports issuing checks via virtual mail, and whether the bank participates in same-day ACH origination. Larger institutions in our directory typically offer all four, while community banks may offer more personalized service in exchange for fewer self-serve features.

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Routing numbers for South Dakota banks

Each US bank's routing number is assigned by the American Bankers Association based on the Federal Reserve district. Banks that operate in South Dakota may have one of several routing numbers depending on the state where the customer's account was originally opened — large national banks like Chase, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America assign different routings by state, while a community South Dakota-only bank typically uses a single routing number for all customers.

The first four digits of any routing number indicate the Federal Reserve processing center; the next four identify the specific bank; the ninth is a check digit calculated from the others. South Dakota banks fall predominantly within their assigned Federal Reserve district. Always verify a routing number against your physical check or your bank's official online portal before using it for ACH or wire setup — typing the wrong number causes a payment to bounce and may incur a returned-item fee.

For a verified, machine-readable list of all routing numbers in South Dakota, consult a Federal Reserve routing-number lookup directory. Most online directories pull from the same FedACH participant database the banks themselves use.

Common business banking products in South Dakota

Most full-service banks operating in South Dakota offer a tiered business checking lineup. The basic tier typically includes a low monthly maintenance fee waived above a minimum balance, 50–200 free transactions per cycle, free incoming wires, and a debit/business-credit card. The next tier up usually doubles the free transaction count, adds free outgoing domestic wires, and includes Positive Pay at no extra charge. Premier and treasury-management products add zero-balance accounts, sweep accounts, lockbox banking, and dedicated commercial banker support — these typically require a much higher operating balance.

In addition to the major national banks listed above, South Dakota hosts a number of strong regional and community banks that may offer better personalized service for owner-operated businesses. Look at the bank's office count — institutions with 5–50 branches are usually positioned as community banks, while larger numbers indicate regional or national reach. The Total assets column above gives a rough sense of the institution's scale.

How CheckCraft helps you write a check at any South Dakota bank

Click any bank in the table above to see a guide tailored to that institution's check format. Each guide includes a printable check layout, a step-by-step writing walkthrough, MICR line guidance, and answers to the most common questions about that bank's business checks. For the curated major banks marked with a star (★), the guide includes the bank's real routing-number table by region; for other banks, the guide includes an illustrative MICR line and instructs you to copy your real routing/account numbers from your physical check.

You can also use the live online check writer to fill in a printable check on screen — just pick your bank, enter the payee and amount, and CheckCraft formats the written line in the formal "and 00/100" form your bank expects.