- Step would save consumers $3.5 billion or more in annual fees
- Some large banks became junk fee machines, CFPB’s Chopra says
The US government unveiled a long-awaited regulation that could slash the biggest banks’ overdraft fee income by as much as $3.5 billion each year.
Under the new rule proposed by the
The new rule would apply to firms with more than $10 billion in assets, meaning about 175 of the country’s largest banks and credit unions would have to comply, according to the CFPB.
While the regulation wouldn’t ban overdraft fees outright, it would regulate how banks can levy them. Banks would still be able to charge customers who overdraft to recoup their costs, but wouldn’t be able to make steep profits on the service. Instead, they would have to charge a so-called “breakeven standard” that would equal the bank or credit union’s cost to write off an overdraft.
“For too long, some banks have charged exorbitant overdraft fees — sometimes $30 or more — that often hit the most vulnerable Americans the hardest, all while banks pad their bottom lines,” President
Along with fee limits, the CFPB is considering subjecting overdraft programs that charge fees higher than either the bank or credit union’s breakeven rate or the CFPB-set fee to enhanced standards required by the Truth in Lending Act. The Federal Reserve, which oversaw overdraft programs until the CFPB’s creation in the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, exempted overdrafts from the federal financial disclosure law in 1968 — a discrepancy that has earned large financial institutions billions of dollars in revenue, according to the CFPB.
“Today, we are proposing rules to close a longstanding loophole that allowed many large banks to transform overdraft into a massive junk fee harvesting machine,” CFPB Director
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Under the proposal, banks and credit unions above that $10 billion threshold would have to disclose the interest rate of overdraft loans and determine a person’s ability to repay an overdraft loan if the fees exceed the costs of covering overdraft or the CFPB’s cap.
For many average American consumers, overdraft fees aren’t consequential to their overall financial health, but for others, they can be disastrous. The charges have come under persistent scrutiny, prompting some banks such as
Even so, banks still collect around $9 billion per year in the charges, according to the CFPB. The agency estimates that policy changes among the largest banks have already saved consumers around $3.5 billion per year.
Underbanked Consumers
The proposal has faced resistance. Banks are already gearing up for a fight against the restrictions, including a potential lawsuit once a final rule is released. And on Wednesday, the Consumer Bankers Association argued that the proposal risks further harm to underbanked consumers, while the rule’s costs and its impact on consumer access to financial products haven’t been adequately considered, it said.
“This one-size-fits-all approach from Washington threatens to undo years of progress while also freezing innovation and competition,” CBA Chief Executive Officer
The CFPB foreshadowed the regulation by bringing
(Corrects to clarify when federal financial disclosure laws would apply to overdraft in fifth and seventh paragraphs.)
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