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by dimmke
1792 days ago
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Banks used to structure these charges to create overdrafts whenever possible. They made it very difficult for you to see what your actual usable balance is. They also used to be allowed to simply reject the transaction if you didn't have the money and still charge a $36 fee. It was insanity. If your checking balance never reaches close to zero, you wouldn't notice this. I was a teenager in 2010 and definitely got hit with a bunch of overdraft fees. Banks know these fees are bullshit (even now, with increased regulation), that's why they're so quick to waive them at first. |
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The most I accomplished was having a branch manager agree to waive 1 overdraft fee since I had never overdrafted my account before.
PayPal was even less helpful.
If I enable overdraft protection with my current bank (Wells Fargo) then they will charge me something like $17 to transfer money from my savings account to cover a charge that my primary account wouldn't have enough funds to cover.
This was a good reminder that I need to switch banks. Maybe I can find a good Credit Union in my area.