Your Finish Rich Plan – A Personal Finance Blog

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June 4th, 2008

The Overdraft Fees Ripoff

Have you ever been burned by your bank’s “creative accounting” when it comes to overdraft fees? Or maybe it was your former bank and that’s exactly the reason why they’re your former bank! There’s a big scam running in the banking system, and it involves overdraft fees and how they’re imposed. This is something that everyone should pay attention to when choosing a bank account.

Overdraft Protection

Before banks started implementing “overdraft protection“, things were simple. Anytime the bank is presented a check for an amount that would overdraw your checking account, it was simply returned NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) and a fee of $10 or $15 was deducted from your balance. Your remaining balance (after deduction of the fee) remained intact and available to cover smaller checks or charges that showed up. Nowadays with “overdraft protection” if a large check arrives, it gets paid, you’re charged a $35, and your account turns negative, and from then on, every single additional check or charge that arrives is guaranteed to “overdraw” and trigger another $35 fee. Even a $1.99 charge will get hit with another $35 fee.

Transaction Processing Order or “Biggest Check First” Policy

You can still get burned in yet another way. Back in the old-days, checks and charges were handled during nightly processing, usually in the order in which they arrived. But now most US banks use a “biggest check first” posting order, by which items posting to a customer’s account post according to the amount of the item, as opposed to the transaction date. The “Biggest Check First” policy is common among large U.S. banks. They keep a temporary ledger in their computers that records transactions as they occur during the day. This temporary ledger is what you see when you do online banking. But then during the night when the computers reconcile all the accounts, the temporary ledger is ignored and all of your transactions for the day are re-executed in the real ledger. The transactions are not handled in the order they occurred during that day, instead they are sorted by dollar amount and the largest transaction is entered first, then the next largest, and so on.

Banks argue that this is done to prevent a customer’s most important transactions (such as a rent or mortgage check, or utility payment) from being returned unpaid, but this also has the effect of maximizing fee income since the larger items deplete the account balance causing multiple overdrafts by smaller items that present on the same day. Consumers have attempted to litigate to prevent this practice, arguing that banks use “Biggest Check First” to manipulate the order of transactions to artificially trigger more overdraft fees to collect.

For example, let’s say on the morning of a particular day I have a balance of $100. During the day I use a debit card to buy a videogame for $65, a snack for $5, and then lunch for $10. During the day, if I checked my balance with online banking, my balance would have gone from $100 to $35, to $30, to $20. If I thought that those transactions are accounted for and deducted from my account in real time, I would be sadly mistaken.

If during this same day a $90 check arrives at the bank to be paid, common sense would suggest that it will bounce. But that’s not what happens. The check will get processed at midnight but so will all my previous transactions that day. All four transactions will be re-processed into the main ledger at midnight, not in the order of occurrence but in order of decreasing dollar amount. First comes the check for $90, which clears fine because my balance is still $100. My balance then drops to $10. Then the $65 debit card transaction, driving the account to $-55, plus the $35 overdraft fee to $-90. Then the $5, and the $10 transactions, each of which carries another $35 fee. The next day my $150 positive account balance has become overdrawn by $175.

Compare that to the transactions being recorded in order of occurrence, where I would have $35 deducted from my $20 balance, leaving me owing the bank just $15.

Regulators Stepping In: H.R. 946

On February 8, 2007, Representative Carolyn Maloney, Chairwoman of the Financial Institutions Subcommittee (D-NY), Financial Services Committee Chairman Barney Frank (D-MA), and Representative Julia Carson (D-IN) introduced legislation to protect consumers from abusive overdraft loan programs and stop financial institutions from deliberately manipulating their systems to generate more overdrafts—while preserving the institutions’ ability to cover occasional overdrafts as a courtesy without triggering the Act’s requirements. The Act would:

1. Amend the Truth in Lending Act to clarify that overdraft fees are finance charges, so that annual interest rates are reported. Consumers would then be able to compare the cost of overdraft loans with the cost of other credit options.
2. Require written consent before enrollment in the overdraft loan program.
3. Require financial institutions to warn the customer when an ATM withdrawal will trigger a fee—and allow the customer to cancel the transaction at that time.
4. Prohibit financial institutions from manipulating the order of check clearing to increase customers’ overdraft loan fees

My take? Overdraft fees as they are currently applied are a very bad financial proposition (at least for the consumers) and something definitely needs to be done. Many of these people end up with large overdraft amounts that they’re unable to repay. Then they get reported to Chexsystems and can no longer open regular checking accounts. Their only recourse? A “fresh start checking account” laden with restrictions and where they’re charged a monthly maintenance fee. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates that Americans pay $17.5 billion per year in fees for these loans that many borrowers never asked for and in many cases can’t afford.

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7 Responses to “The Overdraft Fees Ripoff”

  1. A very well-written and informative article.

    The best defense against bank overdraft fees is, of course, to track all transactions to prevent overdrafts. The primary responsilibilty – and control over the situation – is in the hands of the account holder.

    Many people make mistakes in their calculations, though, that can trigger some pretty huge fees. What I’d like to see is immediate notification available via e-mail- not having to wait 5-6 days until a notice arrives in the mail (and more checks bounce). This is why it’s good to check accounts online every day.

  2. BeThisWay,
    Thanks for the compliment! I agree with your point, but the truth is that even if you’re careful you can still get hit. But hey, I guess we just have to be EXTRA careful :)

  3. [...] Finish Rich Plan presents The overdraft fees ripoff: “Overdraft fees as they are currently applied are a very bad financial proposition (at least [...]

  4. My bank is so good at it that it isn’t even the same days debits…example:
    On 12/16/08 at 10:00 A.M. my balance was $20.00 and had been for several days (I was waiting on a 500.00 check, that was tied up in the mail). I went online and recharged my phone card for $11.00, using my debit card..leaving a balance of $9.00…which showed as being deducted online at the bank…The next day (12/17/08) still no check and I needed some money and was willing to pay the $23.00 overdraft charge for the useage of it… I withdrew $160.00 and the receipt showed the balance as being -$151.00… (still my $9.00 balance) On the 18th I checked the account online and it listed two overdraft charges one for the $160.00 first and then the $11.00 charge (which WAS posted over 30 hours later than when I paid it)… The merchant did NOT think it was just a “HOLD” as the bank said or I’m sure that they would have NOT recharged my phone card with minutes immediately…
    This is a common practice and a big rip off, it only happens when my account gets low… the rest of the charges all month go through the same day or the next morning at the latest….CROOKS..

  5. Great Article. I have been onto their “Scam” now for many months. I lost several dollars to Bank of America thru “Creative Accounting”. Sometimes BOA will show you a charge on the Online Banking and then it mysteriously disappears for several days then when the balance is low enough they stick it back in to try to throw you off. I have been keeping my own side ledger, as I should to avoid this but Please people DO NOT TRUST Bank of America’s online Banking. They will steal from you any possible way that they can.

  6. Coming from someone who has lost thousands of dollars to overdraft fees over the last few years, believe me you are preaching to the choir. At some point though you have to look at creative accounting for what it is, ingenuity at its best. It may be annoying but at the end of the day the banks deserve some credit for making huge dollars on this industry that they have constructed from nothing in an effort to exploit those who struggle with fiscal responsibility. A market which goes without saying is enormous. If you are interested in a more jovial approach to bank overdrafts you may enjoy this recent blog post on my site http://degeneratedays.blogspot.com/2009/03/letter-from-fellow-degenerate.html

  7. My Bank – Compass (Where I am closing my business account and moving to another bank after over 20 years) has started to lump all checks & deposits togather from Thursday night until Tuesday morning, and then processing all the checks at once BEFORE processing all the deposits. (This is a business account where several small credit card charges under a dollar also come through). The result is that even though I keep a $1,000 positive balance in my account, tuesday morning I still will end up with several $38 nsf fees. If I call the bank and fight them, they usually will refund 3/4 of the nsf charges as I am a “Priority” customer. But I have had it with this “creative bookkeeping” and am moving my account which sees $300,000+ a year in deposits to another bank. Beware of compass bank and write your state banking commision if you have one.

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