Key facts
- Congress rescinded a rule that capped bank overdraft fees.
- Banks are seeing increased revenue from overdraft charges.
- Some institutions still implement daily overdraft fees, charging customers for each day an account is negative.
- These daily fees can range from $5 to $10 and compound quickly.
- Consumer advocates argue these fees disproportionately harm low-balance account holders.
Following the removal of a congressional rule that capped bank overdraft fees, financial institutions are experiencing a rise in revenue from these charges. Many banks, particularly smaller and regional ones, continue to implement daily overdraft fees, which can add $5 to $10 per day to an account balance that has dipped below zero. This practice, criticized by consumer advocacy groups, disproportionately affects customers with lower account balances and volatile cash flow, turning a single shortfall into a cascade of charges. While major banks like JPMorgan Chase have scaled back or eliminated such fees, others maintain them, arguing they encourage customers to rectify negative balances. Critics, however, view these fees as a significant revenue stream derived from vulnerable account holders, with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau having previously scrutinized these practices as 'junk fees'.
