Bankers still have their hands buried deep in our wallets. Banks are charging us more and hidden fees just to use our ATM card or checking account, according to a November 2001 PIRG Big Banks, Bigger Fees report. Bank service fee income not including ATM surcharges is about $20 billion each year.
Complaints: Complaint about your bank? Contact Bank regulators such as the Federal Reserve Board or other regulators such as the Comptroller of the Currency, which regulates national banks. Don't worry if you send your complaint to the wrong regulator—it will be forwarded.
Bank Fees: A November 2001 PIRG Big Banks, Bigger Fees report finds that the average consumer who can't afford to meet minimum balance requirements pays $228/year for a regular checking account, when all service fees, account fees, and ATM fees are added together.
Banks have devised a three part strategy to gouge consumers. They raise existing fees, invent new ones, and make it harder to avoid fees, by raising minimum balance requirements, so more people pay more fees. And, even though banks have raised the interest we pay them on our credit cards dramatically, they haven't significantly increased the interest they pay us on deposits. PIRG reports document how banks charge consumers twice to use the ATM machine only once.
What Can Consumers Do?
1. Credit Unions: Bank at a credit union, not at a bank. Credit unions are member-owned alternatives to commercial banks. Because credit unions are owned by their members and don't care to gouge them, their fees are generally lower than bank fees. Many larger credit unions have branches, ATM networks and offer all the services of a bank. Many companies, unions, state and local governments and communities have credit unions that you may qualify to join. If one family member qualifies, generally everyone can join. Credit union deposits are federally-insured, just as bank deposits are.
2. Shop For Financial Services. This should be an ongoing process because banks are constantly changing their fee structures. Compare the costs of your accounts to those of other banks in your area. Know what types of transactions you regularly make and evaluate accounts with your needs as a yardstick. You may find a better deal at a different bank. If you don't qualify for a credit union account, small, locally-owned community banks generally have lower prices, and better service, than out-of-state owned mega-banks.
Free checking: 29% of banks in PIRG's 2001 survey offer totally free checking.
Direct Deposit: Ask your employer if you can be paid through direct deposit. The government will also provide Social Security and other benefits through direct deposit. Many banks will offer free or lower-cost checking with direct deposit, because they save so much money.
Linked accounts: Look for banks that offer free checking or free checking with a "linked" or "relationship" balance in another account. Your savings balance—or even a mortgage or car loan—can offset your checking account balance requirement.
ATMs: Large banks are exploiting their ATM networks to gouge non-customers with the ATM surcharge. If enough small bank consumers get tired of paying these outrageous fees and switch to the large bank to avoid them, then the large banks will begin to charge their own customers more fees. While most banks don't charge you if use their own machines, things are starting to change for the worse. So, use your own bank's ATMs whenever possible. If none are around, look for machines with a "NO SURCHARGE HERE" Logo. Avoid double-dipping, fee gouging, surcharging ATMs.
Here are some no-surcharge resources.
First, see our
main website http://www.stopatmfees.com.
Then, if you are a credit union member, ask your credit union for a list of
surcharge free ATMs. Check http://www.cuna.org
for the address of your state credit union league.
Beware of NOW (interest-bearing checking) accounts. If you cannot maintain
high minimum balances, stay away from NOW accounts. The high fees on NOW accounts
may cost you more than it's worth to earn the low interest on your balance.
Explore no-frills checking options. If you write few checks each month,
look at no-frills flat fee checking accounts. This is particularly important
if you cannot meet minimum required balances to avoid regular checking account
fees. However, watch out for no-frills accounts with punitive over-the-check-limit
and bounced check fees for no-frills accounts. Bank consultants regularly recommend
low check limits, high per-check fees, and, special, higher, bounced check fees
for these accounts.
3. Complain: Banks shouldn't charge regular customers outrageous
bounced check fees or alleged credit card late fees. Demand that the bank waive
an occasional $25 bounced check fee, especially if it's due to the bank's complicated
check availability schedules. If you can't understand the bank's Byzantine fee
brochures, complain! If the bank wants to charge you a fee for innocently depositing
someone else's bounced check in your account, complain! And if the bank tries
to charge you a fee for talking to a human teller or to call them on the phone,
don't simply complain, vote with your feet! And copy your complaint to regulators:
Contact Bank regulators such as the Federal
Reserve Board or other regulators such as the Comptroller of the
Currency, which regulates national banks. Don't worry if you send your complaint
to the wrong regulator—it will be forwarded.
And send a letter to the bank president explaining that you closed your account because of outrageous bank fees.