• rsh@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    In 2020 banks charged $30,000,000,000 in fees. That’s 30 BILLION dollars! By comparison all Hollywood movies make about $11 billion total!

    So, for every dollar Americans spent on going to the movies, they spent three on account fees, over draft fees etc.

    Banks answer to their share holders. Share holders like money, so banks charge fees.

    Bank is a four-letter word.

    Do something about the problem. Take away their ability to steal money from people that don’t have it.

    Switch to a credit union. Lower or zero fees. Credit unions answer to their members, I.e. account holders.

    • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If you like that, you’re going to love the next bit:

      • Banks create their own money when they make loans.

      Surely, I must be ill informed, right?! Nope. Here’s a paper from none other than the Bank Of England: Money Creation In The Modern Economy.

      Having a Banking License is like having your very own digital “money printing machine”: they can’t actually print currency (notes and coins) but since most modern money is only 0s and 1s in computers (specifically, amount values associated with client accounts) they can create money like that - basically credit X money to a client account when they loan money and at the same time debit X money from a special account which needs not have that money - and do it again and again untill they hit the certain reserve criteria.

      Yes, at the end of the loan period all this gets (or will have during the life of the loan) unwound - the customer pays the principal of the loan, so the bank debits X money from the client account and credits X money to that special account, so everything is properly back to zeros in accounting terms on that special account - all of which would’ve been as if nothing happenned but … the bank gets interest and keeps.

      That’s right, banks get paid interest on money that has never existed, and that interest does have to be created as wealth by the broader Economy, which has massive implications in terms of just how big a share of the wealth produced by the whole Economy banks capture because they can create money out of thin air.

      It’s not by chance that in the last 2 decades banks have pushed really hard for people to pay everything by card: as long as the money stays digital banks can make money like this to their heart’s content (limited only by the reserve criteria) without having to procure notes and coins.

      It’s also not by chance that in the last 2 decades banks have also pushed really hard for people and companies to become ever more indebted, for the obvious reason that the more money banks create out of thin air as loans the more interest they receive from those loans of made up money.

      As for reserve criteria, banks need to have a certain fraction of all the money the loaned out as reserve but last I checked those details (at the time MIFid 3 came out) the so-called “sophisticated banks” with advanced financial modeling tools had the possibility to go as low as 2% - which means 98% of the money they loan is created by them out of thin air.

      In practice and if I remember it correctly, around 94% if all money in circulation is created this way.

    • whatwhatwutyut@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      I actually had more fees when with a credit union. Iirc they wanted $3 to issue a cashier’s check - the bank I was with charged $5 for a cashier’s check… after you had used the free one they allowed each month.

      The bank also honored my request to decline charges that would overdraft my account. They don’t charge for declining these charges. The credit union ignored my choice on that and charged overdraft fees without any notification to me that my checking account was negative (I had money that was in a savings account linked to the checking, I had just forgotten to transfer after getting paid). So I think ymmv for the quality of banks and credit unions.

    • Resonosity@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      I’m curious to learn more about how shit banks are and how much better credit unions are.

      Or are credit unions the only alternative?

    • Waraugh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 year ago

      Is that 11 billion per year? Is that all banks worldwide or is it isolated in some way? Is 11 billion with Hollywood accounting or real earnings? What does movie revenue(?) have to do with bank fees? How does the 30 billion in fees compare to banana revenue?

  • BetaDoggo_@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    “We’ve overleveraged ourselves giving out loans that we can’t fully back, so here’s a contribution fee to ensure that we don’t collapse.”

    -A completely legal financial institution

    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      No worries bro. If things get rough for ya the government will just bail you out on behalf of taxpayers. You are all good. Thanks for the fee chap.

    • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Eh I think it’s more of a “fuck you, just because we can.”

      Many loans are sold off as securities, though it depends on the bank. The fuckery is strong though.

  • calypsopub@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I have a good friend with severe ADHD. She was in big trouble because of this and about to get evicted and lose her car because of dumb decisions. I took over her finances completely to get her out of the hole. She was racking up more than $500 of overdraft fees per month, had taken out a usurious car title loan, and had a ridiculous amount of credit card debt. It’s been 20 years, and to this day she is not allowed to have a credit card. We have tried to set up her life so this doesn’t happen again, but the banks keep trying to do her a favor by “allowing” her to overdraw her account, despite instructions not to do so. Life is hell for those with executive dysfunction, and the banks take full advantage of their weakness.

    • Stumblinbear@pawb.social
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      1 year ago

      despite instructions not to do so

      Careful with the “overdraft protection” wording. You want it disabled, not enabled.

      • ettyblatant@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I learned the hard way that I had to specifically ask the bank to just deny a charge instead of allowing it and then charging me a daily fee. What a fucking racket

        • WYLD_STALLYNS@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          I had it turned onto my account before, and I went in a told the manager if it gets turned back on, I’m coming back.

          He asked if that was a veiled threat, and I calmly said, does it need to be for it to turned it off permanently? He responded, no and promptly said it will never turned back on.

          It’s unfortunate that sometimes they force you to be pushy to a party that is only doing a job for under half the states average to buy a home. I’m not a violent person, but I also don’t like wait until there’s a problem to be jerked around for months.

        • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          I’ve had it where even if overdraft ‘protection’ is off, they’ll still allow ACH/recurring charges through and charge you the fee anyway.

      • AdamHenry@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 year ago

        I swear that they will use any and everything to revive overdraft protection. I’ve gone in person, I’ve gone in person and gave them a signed and dated document I’ve also deposited a signed and dated document while making a check/cash deposit. It’s a 50/50 chance that if I call tomorrow, I will have overdraft protection. This really is something I recommend customers check on a regular basis.

    • 🐍🩶🐢@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I wasn’t quite that bad when I was younger, but I did ban myself from credit cards after a certain point of wrecking my life. It has been a few years since my life fell apart, but it has literally been just the last few months that my credit has finally recovered after being unable to pay my student loans for a while due to circumstances out of my control, being bad with money due to untreated ADHD, and general I fucked up.

      The thing that helps me the most is paying all of my bills from my Bank app (“Bill Pay”). This way I can see the dates, setup any automated payments, and in a lot of cases receive the actual statement in the app. Having to go to a bunch of websites is stressful and if I have to mail it myself, I am screwed. Having one app/website is a lot easier to handle. I am not perfect, but my wonderful landlord only has to remind me once in a while if I forget instead of all the time. I am exceedingly lucky right now to have my finances under control where I can comfortably schedule my rent to be paid automatically without me having to worry about payday and such. It took forever to get there.

      You are a wonderful person to try and help your friend. I would have loved to have someone like that in my life a decade ago, but I somehow made it anyways. Trying to get my shit together is a huge struggle and I really feel for her.

    • Sonicdemon86@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I’ve had this same problem. I switched to a credit union and had them turn off overdraft protection. It has helped since I don’t overdraft with my card anymore and it gets denied instead. Try a credit union in your area and see if they would do the same thing.

  • Rhaedas@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    The final nail in the coffin for me was when Bank of America not only charged an overdraft fee for each insufficient charge, they arranged the order highest to lowest coming out that day to maximize the potential fees.

    My credit union will also charge a fee for an overdraft. One penny if I can get money in that day to cover it, and they give me a warning so I can do just that.

  • grayman@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Get an account at a bank that charges interest for negative balances instead of fees. It’s the European banking model. Plenty of smaller US banks do this. Also, STOP BUYING STUFF WITH A DEBIT CARD!!!

        • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          My credit union simply declines debit card transactions if they’re over the available balance. I’m kind of stunned to learn this apparently isn’t common, to the point people feel they need to outright avoid using debit cards?

          For other transactions that may overdraw (automatic withdrawals, ACH, etc) we have the option to pull from savings. If the overdraft is under $10 or so, they don’t charge anything. If they do charge the $35 dollar overdraft fee, you can call and they’ll waive it when you deposit the overdrafted amount (within a reasonable amount of time).

          I’ve been with my credit union since mom helped open my account when I was a teenager. I’m so frequently flabbergasted to hear about some of the things people put up with from their banks.

    • BobGnarley@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Isnt charging interest the same as a fee though? Also, why stop buying with a debit card? Are you advising credit cards are a better choice?

      • Poayjay@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        No because 12%(?) interest on overdrawing your account by $1 is a lot less than a $35 flat fee. If you overdraw your account you’re basically asking for a loan for the negative balance. It makes more sense to charge like you would for a loan.

        I had a bank with “overdraft protection” before. It was basically a $500 line of credit that was activated if you overdrew. The interest rate was terrible, though.

        • Neuromancer@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          To me that’s reasonable. If the interest was 20%. That’s better than the fee. The fee if calculated at an interest rate is robbery.

      • BigT54@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Credit cards are definitely better than debit cards if you can manage your spending well. The biggest reason for me is that credit cards offer better fraud protection. Say your debit card gets stolen, they can clean out your entire bank account and suddenly you have no money. It will take time for the bank to reverse these charges, meanwhile you have no way to buy necessities. With credit it’s not your money and the credit card companies are insured and deal with this stuff daily. You also still have money in your bank account for necessities.

        You absolutely have to be careful with credit though, especially if you aren’t good at budgeting. It’s not free money and will charge interest if not paid off each month, but if you can use it responsibly you can take advantage of the perks, like cash back, points and whatever else they offer.

        What I personally do is only use credit cards, I have certain ones that offer the best perks for certain purchases and pay them off in full every month at minimum. You can set them up to be very similar to a debit card and monitor your spending so you don’t build up too much debt. It boils down to whether or not you can trust yourself to be vigilant in sticking to a budget.

        • Apathy Tree@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          1 year ago

          What I do to make sure I’m staying in budget is pay the cards off every week. Gives time for transactions to post and ensures the card never holds a higher balance than I can pay off before interest is added.

          I’ve gotten automatic credit line increases over the years, so the amount I can charge is roughly 4x the max I ever have in the bank, but the weekly payoff strategy makes it basically the same as using debit, except with cash back perks.

        • enki@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          This is the way. Get a couple good rewards cards, but treat them like a debit card. Don’t spend money you don’t have unless it’s an emergency, and always pay off your balance before the billing cycle ends. You’ll pay no interest and earn points for travel, statement credits, and more.

          Start with a flat rewards card like the Wells Fargo Active Cash card. No annual fee and 2% back on all purchases, and if you pay your mobile phone bill with it, you get $600 towards replacing a broken or stole phone.

          Once you’ve built credit, check out cards like Chase Sapphire Reserved which gives 3% on travel and restaurants/bars, and points are 1.5x when you book travel through Chase, so a $300 flight only costs $200 worth of points. The Amex Blue Cash Preferred gives 6% at supermarkets and on streaming services, and 3% at gas stations, and they often do promos with up to 10% cash back. As long as you pay your cards off every month and don’t get hit with interest, it’s free money just for buying the same things you always do.

      • theneverfox@pawb.social
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        1 year ago

        It’s not really a fee though - it’s just fairly applying the interest rate. It sounds very fair to me - you disadvantage them no more than you help them if they were on the other size of 0.

        But more importantly, a fee is an arbitrary amount of money charged. It might be linked to costs you incurred for the other party, they might be making a profit or a loss on the exchange - at the end of the day it’s just an arbitrary amount of money

    • deweydecibel@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Feel like Im missing something, here.

      If I try to pay with my debit card and there’s not enough in my account to cover the transaction, it gets declined.

      Moreover, most times I’ve ever been overdrawn have not been due to a debit card, but a check or bank withdrawal or whatever for a bill or something.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        When the payment is done via a network such as VISA or Mastercard (which in some countries such as the UK which do not have their own card payment networks are the only networks for both Credit and Debit cards), the payment might be made without checking if the account linked to the card has enough to cover it (even for cardholder present payments, i.e. you’re paying yourself at the machine with the physical card, not using the card numbers), and if you have not arranged with the bank to have overdrafts authorized in that account there will be an “unarranged overdraft” and some banks charge you a lot for it, in some case even do it per day the account is in overdraft.

        In countries with their own card payment networks, the network only does debit payments and as part of the protocol the system first checks the account to see if it can cover that payment and only then accepts (or denies) the payment.

      • grayman@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        The issue is theft. In the US a debit card transaction dispute takes months to resolve and you may not get all your money back. So when your card number is stolen and used, you’re out a lot of money for months and some you never get back. CC disputes are reversed in the card holder’s favor immediately.

    • Imgonnatrythis@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      Yeah, caution with this advice depending on the kind of person you are. For many issues with CC debit can be far worse than occasional overdraft fees (which are pretty messed up most of the time, agree avoid banks that’s are harsh on this). Debit card use keeps real time tabs on how your actual available resources and can help with fiscal responsibility for some. If you keep in top of cc payments and consistently avoid debt, agree that’s the way to go, but easier said than done for many.

      • grayman@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If you can’t use a cc responsibly, use cash. Every card eventually gets stolen if used frequently. There are too many breaches.

      • ares35@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        debit cards usually lack the buyer protection that credit cards offer. just treat your credit cards like an old-school charge card that got paid off every month

        • HubertManne@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          yeah cc are the best but you need to treat them like its a debit card. I actualy have to call regularly to get my maximums lowered. They love to set them real high but I don’t want them larger than what I earn in a month which is still to high given its not like I could spend that whole amount given the stuff that you have to pay every month not on cc and I have more than one. You definately cannot charge till you get rejected from hitting the limit.

      • BigT54@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        While I agree with you on the second point, I don’t believe debit cards are better than credit cards for several reasons. The main one is that credit cards offer better fraud protection. Say your debit card gets stolen, they can clean out your entire bank account and suddenly you have no money. It will take time for the bank to reverse these charges, meanwhile you have no way to buy necessities. With credit it’s not your money and the credit card companies are insured and deal with this stuff daily. You also still have money in your bank account.

        You absolutely have to be careful with credit though, especially if you aren’t good at budgeting. It’s not free money, but if you can use it responsibly you can take advantage of the credit card perks, like cash back.

        • irmoz@reddthat.com
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          1 year ago

          Debit cards can be frozen and charges can be reversed. I’ve done this before. You’re just advertising for credit card companies at this point. I don’t wanna have to pay interest on my purchases, thanks.

          • tpyo@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m agreeing with you

            I’ve had my debit card compromised and had absolutely no issues getting the charges reversed

            Also as an aside, because my credit union debit card is a MasterCard, I get all of the “credit card benefits” such as the extended warranty and fraud protection. Regardless of the fact it’s associated with a debit account

            Credit unions all the way

          • jjjalljs@ttrpg.network
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            1 year ago

            I’ve never paid interest on a credit card, and if you pay off the balance each month you won’t either.

    • soloner@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      That last sentence has been the only thing going through my head as I read this post/comments.

      I haven’t had an overdraft in like… Idk over a decade. As much as the banks suck for doing this, it’s really easily avoidable with a CC.

      Then again I know some people who cannot use CCs cuz they can’t control their spending and will literally impulse buy themselves into debt.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        But it’s not that easy. I also have not had an overdraft fee in decades, because I am financially stable and can afford it. However I also remember more desperate times when I paid so much in fees and still don’t think there was a better approach.

        Credit unions generally have lower fees but they still have some, and many require a good credit score to join. Works for me, now.

        Some banks/credit unions now let you chose to have a transaction you couldn’t afford rejected rather than charge a fee. It’s a crime that this wasn’t always the case

        Some banks now process checks in the order received, rather than an order which maximizes the number of fees they can charge, should some of them overdraft. It is also a crime that this wasn’t always the case

      • HobbitFoot @thelemmy.club
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        1 year ago

        It comes down to being avoidable if you have money and self control.

        For some in cases where money is tight, a random charge can wreck a budget and have major knock-on effects.

        In other cases, people may not have the knowledge or self-control to operate in a system where you can spend money you don’t have. Worse, the current banking system doesn’t really let you know if there is a problem until it already exists because solving problems before they happen doesn’t make money.

        • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Considering just how little most people have in reserves (in my country the average is something like €500, which is fking ridicukous IMHO), all it might take is, say, your electricity company to make a mistake on a direct debit and all of a sudden there might be hundreds of euros there less than what you expected.

          (Sure, they’ll refund you the excess money they took … eventually … but they won’t refund you for any problems resulting from their “mistake”, so you’re SOLO on that).

          Worse, in my own experience in the only time I had one of those (I had moved to another country, was verbally confirmed by the bank when I openned my account that such payments would bounce and yet one didn’t bounce and I got charged “unarranged overdraft” fees), even if you have another account with the banks (such as a savings account) with about 1000x what was needed to cover that amount, they won’t use any of that money and instead treat it as an overdraft and charge you for it a lot if unarranged.

          PS: I ditched that bank within a week, so the £20 or whatever they made from that little stunt was a lot less than they lost, because a lot of money went through my bank accounts (some staying there for long periods until invested) in the years after that.

    • Rokk@feddit.uk
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      1 year ago

      Debit cards in the UK generally don’t let you go overdrawn.

      Like if I try to buy something and don’t have enough in my account I just get told ‘you can’t buy this’ and have to go transfer some more money to my account.

      I pay a £5 monthly fee, but that gets me travel insurance, breakdown cover, mobile phone cover and a bunch of other benefits that I haven’t had to use yet.

      I could opt out of that £5 fee and not pay anything at all for my banking. I find all the fees you end up with in the US a little bit insane.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Not really: I once went overdrawn on a Debit card in the UK (because the country doesn’t really have its own payments network and uses others such as VISA, which was the one for my card) even though I had verbally agreed with them it would never happen and any such payments would just bounce (as I was used to the banking cards in my home country of Portugal which use a local banking network were no unarranged overdrafts can happen, as it’s designed from the ground up as a debit-only network for in person payments), it was an in person payment and I had more than enough money in my savings account.

        They charged me £20 for it (if I remember it correctly). I was pissed off enough that I closed my accounts with them and moved banks.

        Mind you, this was over 15 years ago.

        Considering the amounts that passed through my accounts (and often stayed they for a good while) after that while I lived in the UK, they lost a ton of money by scamming those £20 from me.

    • Resonosity@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      What’s the issue with a debit card again? Are you saying that we should be using credit cards, or physical currency?

      • grayman@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        If your card number is stolen the bank will take months if at all reversing the charges. It’s also easy to distinguish a debit from a credit card. When the thief figures out it’s a debit card, they drain every possible penny right away. They can use it for cash back so the payout is faster and easier. Meanwhile your account is overdrafting and you can’t pay your bills for months.

        Compare that to a stolen credit card… You just tell the bank which charges are fraud and they reverse them all immediately without question.

        Use credit cards or cash. Leave the debit card at home locked away for the rare atm run or just destroy it.

        • Resonosity@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          Are there any systems I (pun unintended) buy into when using a credit card over a debit card?

          I’m still agreeing to a bank, for instance, when credit unions are an alternative.

          Apologies for the naivete. Seems like my education failed me here.

          • grayman@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Cash back is with CC only. Other than the immediate financial debit, they’re the same in almost every way from the standpoint of a transaction. The use contract favors the bank with a debit card whereas it favors the card holder with a credit card.

            My main credit card is through a credit union. So are most of my accounts. I avoid traditional banks too.

  • Orionza@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    One time my bank did this to me. So I went to the bank and closed my account. The manager asked why. I told him obviously I can’t afford to have a bank account. I can still see the look on his face.

  • Duchess of Waves@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    And another thing were Europeans are better. Paying “fines” for overdrawing your banking account are illegal as are “fines” for failed withdrawals. We had them in the past for a while but the courts smashed that scheme to pieces. On the other hand, often banks do not even allow overdrawing. You hit Zero? End of the Line. Good Customers often get a credit up to some thousand Euro. I have specifically asked to limit my credit frame to €100. Because even while I don’t pay a fine for “overdrawing” I still pay absurde interest rates for overcharging - around 0,03% per day = 12,5% per year.

    Then there is another thing, two of the five largest banks for end users in Germany are “cooperative banks” which means they are not allowed to make a profit. They are practically owned by their customers. They aren’t exactly “the banks with the best interest rates” but overall a lot more relaxed than the competitors. On the other hand… they don’t accept every customer. Mostly small businesses and farmers.

    Also all banks are forced to cooperate a lot more than US banks which is why credit cards and their often absurd costs are mostly unknown around here.

    Edit, I just checked if my bank also offers to refill my daily account from my other accounts if it reaches Zero… in fact it DOES. For Free.

  • NaturalViber@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This scenario is kind of happening to me right now. "Hello, we see that you couldn’t afford to make your full phone payment last week and paid half to keep your service active. We will not send the regular reminder text that we usually send a day before. You forgot to pay the rest of your bill. Enjoy paying full price, plus a “reactivation fee”.

    • neutron@thelemmy.club
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      1 year ago

      It is really, really expensive to be poor.

      Having the ‘Wealthy Family’ DLC purchased right before character creation opens up so many interesting quest paths that aren’t the same boring grind. You don’t even have to be strategic with INT or PHY stat points, there are plenty of LCK boosts balancing them out.

  • mommykink@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My bank let me bond $100 of my own money specifically to protect against overdraft charges. I’d only need to pay them if I went over the $100 overdraft protection. Yall need to stop banking with these giant multinational places and go local

    • whatwhatwutyut@midwest.social
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      1 year ago

      My bank has a system where overcharging a checking account can pull from a linked savings account to avoid overdrafts.

      Instead of a $35 overdraft fee, you get charged $10 for the intense labor they do of transferring the money for you. /s

    • RememberTheApollo_@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      It’s really hard to find a bank that will treat you like that. I have a credit union that has a $500 “buffer” you can hit in an overdraft. No fees other than a very low interest charge. Basically a tiny loan that incurs no charge if you pay it off right away. Real overdrafts they do charge for, unfortunately.

    • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I mean, I get that that’s something. But that only sounds very slightly better than overdraft fees in the first place.

      “Pay us now, and when you go over it’s fine unless it’s more than you paid us”

      But the thing is, overdrafting that small amount isn’t even significant to a bank. They mostly use the ability to overdraft as an excuse to impose a fee. They can and do deny charges that they don’t think they can impose a fee for.

      So it kind of sounds like your bank just tricked you into paying ~3 of those fees up front with the promise that they won’t charge you more unless they have to.

      There are banks out there that don’t charge overdraft fees at all. Capital one stopped recently. They just threaten to close your account when it sits negative for too long.

      • mommykink@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I should probably note that the $100 value was set by me. I could’ve bonded any amount as overdraft protection but $100 seemed like a safe amount. I don’t disagree that overdraft fees are scams regardless, but it’s definitely better than the alternative IMO

  • rengoku2@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    Not murican.

    How the flying fuck is it even possible to overdraw over there? Here where I live banks will auto reject any attempt to go over your limit without explicit requests.

    • MiDaBa@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Because banks have kept antiquated policies that go back to a time before computers for no other reason other than that it makes them a lot of money. At some point in history your bank account ledger would have been kept hand written on paper that folded out to what they called (get this) a spreadsheet. Each ledger would have been kept at the single branch where the account was opened. Another branch across town would have no idea what your balance was so they would have to accept charges before physically mailing it to your local branch for processing. If the payment didn’t clear but the bank had already paid on your behalf then it made sense to charge a fine.
      These days literally the only reason for a bank to let an account overdraw is because it makes them a lot of money. They don’t care that they are getting rich off of the poorest among us. In my eyes they’re no better than sleazy payday loan centers.

  • Seudo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Illegal in Australia. After a ten year legal battle I got mine refunded.

    • chiliedogg@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      There should absolutely be a max percentage of the overdrawn amount, and only one charge.

      None of this “we’ll let you rack up 10 $3.00 swipes while overdrawn so we can hit you for $350” bullshit.

      Or the re-ordering of payments to maximize the fees. Wells Fargo was pulling some bullshit a few years back where if you had $100 in your account and you spent $4 then $5, then $9, then $20, then $105, they’d process the $105 first so they could get you for overdrawing 5 times instead of once.

    • Duchess of Waves@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Same here in Germany. The heirs of a deceased relative and a living cousin are currently trying to get the money back from the bank for some overcharge fees happening between 2008 and 2015. It is only around €300 for everything but you gotta teach them a lesson or else…

    • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Is this a recent (like last 10 years) change? I have some vague memory that I had a small overdraft fee I got waived before closing my account.

      • Seudo@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, I settled maybe a couple years ago. ANZ was the first and I think that set the precedent for the rest.

  • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    What I’ve gathered from the comments here, simply equates to:

    Banks are for people with more money than sense, or people wealthy enough to have significant investments and passive income.

    If that’s not you, go for a credit union, who will be more compassionate to people who may be struggling financially and/or living paycheque to paycheque.

    I use a bank because I’m fairly dumb, and also, the bank made it easy for me, with appropriate documentation to create/manage/access my father’s funds when he became unable to do it himself. The credit union he used was nearly impossible to work with, and once they found out we had been logging into his online banking to pay his bills because he couldn’t remember to do it, they locked out his online access citing that “only the cardholder is allowed to use the online banking system”. To get it unlocked we had to take my father, who was going senile and either already had, or would shortly have a confirmed Alzheimer’s diagnosis, down to the bank to have it unlocked. Through the entire process, he didn’t understand what was happening, but he was able to sign the paperwork, so the bank accepted that; what’s ridiculous about the encounter is that the documentation I had, which was power of attorney for assets, was scoffed at, despite being a legal document, signed, dated, with witnesses. They tossed that out without much more than a glance. So once we got the account unlocked, I started a new account at a new bank in his name as a trust account (for him, administrated by me, his legal power of attorney), and we promptly moved all his bills, and all his money to it.

    We maintained that account because we couldn’t close it. The reason? If you guessed “only the account holder can do that” then you win. We left about $10 in the account and ignored it for several years until my father passed away, we then did the rounds to the banks with the death certificate, closing all the accounts… Unfortunately, he had a handwritten will which they also rejected, so after about 8-10 months of working with a lawyer to get the will certified by the court and have the court appoint my brother as executor, we were finally able to resolve all the banking mayhem that plagued us for the better part of a decade as my father lost his mind. He spent the last few years of his life getting some of the best care available, and about a year after he died, my SO changed jobs (she works in long term care) to that same facility and can confirm, it’s one of the best she’s ever worked at. It’s comforting to know that despite us being put through the ringer by the banks for no good reason, at least he got the care he needed and deserved in the end.

    I still miss him and his weird unhelpful advice. I hope he rests in peace.

    • Rognaut@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      I had a Navy Federal Credit Union account that had a $500 line of credit overdraft protection. I never used it but I know plenty who did.

  • brb@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    How do you overdraw? Shouldn’t the payment just not go through if you don’t have enough money?

    • Stamets@lemmy.worldOP
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      Oh you’d think. I honestly don’t understand what the criteria for it is. It just seems completely fucking arbitrary.

      The worst thing is when you try to buy something online and don’t have enough so your bank charges you an NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) fee. Literally charging you money for not having enough money. That brings me down into the negative and suddenly I’m overdraft so what do they do? Charge me a fucking overdraft fee.

      Fuck you Tangerine. A total of $80 in charges. Why? Because I only had $33.65 in the bank and the PS4 game I was trying to buy was $33.85. I messed up the math and thought I had enough. But yeah. I couldn’t afford a $34 game so surely I can afford $80. Pricks.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        And it’s also a “feature” when a bank is like “hey bro, I know you don’t have enough money to cover all these checks/charges that just came through, so I’ll cash the biggest first, then charge $35/each fir all the others even if they were first”

      • JCreazy@midwest.social
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        1 year ago

        It’s a “feature”. Banks are like “hey bro, I know she don’t have any money. We’ll get you this time. But you’re going to have to pay $35 for it. I could just not allow The purchase to go through but I know you really really want whatever you’re about to purchase. So just go ahead and buy it and pay that $35 fee. No big deal.” I know that some banks you can have them turn off overdraft protection so it’ll just fail the transaction but usually overdraft protection is on by default.

    • FarFarAway@startrek.website
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      1 year ago

      I’ve actually tried to have the bank, on multiple occasions, cut me off when my balance hit zero.

      They refused. But I can link it to my savings so they can charge me $5 to transfer $100 from my savings to prevent the $35 overdraft fee. No, they won’t alert you when they are transferring it. Yes, they will keep perform multiple transfers until you deposit more money / your savings runs out.

      I know the banks need to make money, but aren’t there any legitimate ways they could do so without screwing people over in the process.

      • AA5B@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, that pisses me off. As part of getting my kids started on you’d financial habits, they really needed to not afford what they can not afford (especially while they’re at home so there’s no real consequences)

      • Seasoned_Greetings@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I know the banks need to make money, but aren’t there any legitimate ways they could do so without screwing people over in the process.

        Oh there are. They make so much money before they extort their customers. You see, banks make their money by investing the cash that’s deposited in them. They don’t have to have liquid cash available for all of the funds for every single customer. They just have to have enough to cover their average daily withdrawal amount bank wide, which is a fraction of their total value.

        The rest of their money goes into avenues specialized in making money off of money, eg., investing.

        On top of that, banks are typically insured for money that they may not have, just incase they reach the limit of what they need vs what they have on hand. For amounts large enough per customer, that’s a government insurance called FDIC.

        So yes, they do have a legitimate way to make money, and it’s the same way that banks have made money since the very first bank came into existence. They invest. But you know, capitalism demands that they ever increase they’re profit margin. So not only are they making money by investing huge, unfathomable amounts of money and making the interest back, but they also have to squeeze their customers like ripe lemons to appease their own investors.

    • DrMango@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      At most banks the ability to overdraw when you swipe your debit card is allowed on an opt-in basis. At many banks the default option is to allow the customer to overdraw with their debit card. At most banks the language around being allowed to overdraw in your account contract is intentionally confusing. You can usually change this selection online or in you bank app, but if you’re confused call the help line on the back of your card. I don’t advise going in to a branch, as the branch bankers are the ones with the incentive to get your money, the call centers actually don’t care as much since the credit goes to the branches performance metrics.

      At ALL banks certain payments will always be able to overdraw your account REGARDLESS of your opt-in/out selection. These are recurring payments for things like gym memberships or Netflix, paper checks, and many other forms of ACH payment.

      An important note: this specifically affects checking/savings accounts and their DEBIT cards. CREDIT cards are different.

      Source: Used to work in a bank branch and had to work my ass off every time I opened an account to ensure that people were aware of how and when they could overdraw bc banks want to steal your money and that’s not cool.

    • grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org
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      Well, you see, you’ve opted-in to a service where, to save you the embarrassment of not being able to pay for something, the bank charges you $35. I’m sure it’s in the fine print somewhere. /s

      TBH, though, my bank lets me opt-out of it. They also let me tie in my savings account, so if I would overdraw my checking account instead they move money from savings and send me a note.

        • abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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          I’m not gonna defend banks very often, but in fairness, it’s opt-out because most people prefer a $35 fee to having a payment rejected. There’s multiple reasons for that:

          1. Payment Rejection or “returned check” fees usually exceed $35 and have worse consequences
          2. They don’t always know whether you’re about to spend more or less than you have until they’ve committed to pay that for you. Most people would not prefer they reject all holds at places like gas stations just because you don’t have enough money on hand to cover the maximum.
          3. Emergencies are just that. If you keep a perfect checkbook (lol), then you’re overdrafting because whatever is happening to you is worse than the $35 overdraft fee.

          Now to put on my “but fuck banks” hat:

          The REAL problem, IMO, is that the fee amounts to usury and should be regulated like any other debt. In most cases, your overdraft is equivalent to thousands of percent interest on the overdraft amount. Some “more honest” banks will limit your fee to the total amount overdrawn, making only 100% in fees (still over 36,000% effective APR if it’s all reconciled the next day). A few banks have come up with “small overdraft forgiveness” where they’ll just bloody not charge you a $35 fee over a dollar or two (like the guy in another thread has). But the DDA/overdraft market is so badly regulated, they can basically do whatever they want and then can collude to keep you from opening a bank account with another bank.

          • AA5B@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I don’t know if that’s really true anymore. It certainly used to be true that this was a service when the fees were rare and consequences serious but this is another case of enshittification where the fees became a profit center so banks changed policies to charge more of them

            • abraxas@sh.itjust.works
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              That I’m on board with. I worked IT at a company that processed overdraft debt and it was a breeze because the Banks have disgusting amounts of leverage against the poor customer.

              But I also think this is a case of “we don’t care about the poor people, even enough to come up with ideas to hurt them”. They came up with this process that works well for middle-class and provides reliable profits, and they won’t actually look into the fact that it fucks with poor people because they don’t care. A few banks were giving my previous employer up 40% of their overdraft revenue to collection companies for years without a second thought. It’s not a lot of money for them, but it’s profits and they don’t care to change what makes money. And for most lower-middle-class folks, a rare fee because a bill doesn’t quite overlap with a paycheck is “better than being SOL”

      • ares35@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        as long as they don’t charge a fee every time that ‘overdraw protection’ is triggered like some banks.

        • grysbok@lemmy.sdf.org
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          Oh, they don’t charge me anything to cover my overdraft with my own money. It’s kinda nice. edit: it’s also a privilege that I have enough savings that this is practical for me.