Dayton Daily News

Banks took $11B in overdraft fees

Advocacy organizati­on seeking to ban practice during pandemic.

- Mary Williams Walsh

Large U.S. banks took $11.68 billion in overdraft fees out of their customers’ accounts last year, even before the pandemic kicked off an economic crisis, according to research by the Center for Responsibl­e Lending.

Vulnerable people were by far the hardest hit: 9% of account holders paid 84% of the overdraft fees, according to the review, which focused on banks with assets of more than $1 billion. Those customers tended to carry low balances, averaging less than $350.

The organizati­on said banks should halt overdraft fees during the pandemic, which has led to 40 million new unemployme­nt claims and significan­t uncertaint­y about how any recovery will play out.

Peter Smith, a researcher who co-wrote the report, said that overdraft fees were a source of distress for many families even in the best of times and that the coronaviru­s pandemic only magnified their effects.

“Banks should not experience an unpreceden­ted windfall as the direct result of their customers’ unpreceden­ted distress,” he said.

The group, which supports policies to improve access to the financial system for poor and marginaliz­ed groups, urged banks to waive overdraft fees voluntaril­y but said it was also backing a proposal to ban such fees during the pandemic.

A spokesman for the American Bankers Associatio­n, Mike Townsend, said banks across the country were providing “unpreceden­ted

assistance” to customers affected by the pandemic, although the specific actions vary by bank. “This includes fee waivers, deferred payments and other accommodat­ions depending on the customer’s individual circumstan­ces,” he said.

The trade group supplied a list of the banks, many of them regional, that have offered help, including with fee waivers. Some specifical­ly said they were offering to stop overdraft fees for a particular time period or on a case-by-case basis.

Overdrafts have already been an issue during the pandemic. Customers of some banks were unable to get access to the full amount of their stimulus payments because they had a negative balance, but other financial institutio­ns made the full payments available to customers even if they had balances that were under zero.

Repeated overdrafts can trigger account closures, amplifying problems for low-income consumers — including blacks and Latinos, who are already far more likely to lack access to banking services. In the worst cases, banks used overdraft fees — typically $35 — to strip all the money out of a low-balance account and then closed it, leaving the customer without access to banking services.

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