Overdraft protection, a service offered by many banks as a convenience, kicks in when a bank approves a transaction and the customer doesn't have enough funds to cover the cost. The bank allows the transaction to go through, like a temporary loan, and then charges the customer a fee somewhere in the range of $25 to $35, regardless of how much the transaction was.
As many unsuspecting consumers have discovered, the convenience factor comes at a cost. One reader wrote that he had deposited a check for several thousand dollars in his bank account. Unbeknownst to him, however, the bank did not release the funds for several days. During that time, he assumed he had funds in his account, and used his debit card for a number of minor transactions – groceries, gasoline, movie tickets, prescription medications. Every transaction racked up an overdraft fee of $35. "That's $140 just in fees… and none of my purchases was over $35," he wrote.
According to a CNN Money article, debit card transactions account for nearly half of all overdrafts, with most of these transactions averaging far less than the overdraft fee itself. And if you don't repay your overdraft within a few days, some banks charge additional fees. The Center for Responsible Lending states that financial institutions "manipulate the order in which they clear deposits and withdrawals in order to maximize overdrafts," and estimates that Americans now pay $17.5 billion each year in fees for abusive overdraft loans, more than the $15.8 billion total paid out to cover those loans.
It's an issue that Congress has decided to act upon. Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), who introduced the "Credit Cardholders' Bill of Rights Act of 2008" (H.R. 5244), and Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) are trying to protect consumers from such hefty fees with a new proposal: the Consumer Overdraft Protection Fair Practices Act (H.R. 946).
"I've been working on reducing sky-high overdraft fees for several years now," Congresswoman Maloney wrote to CNN Money.com. "Overdraft loans can be useful financial tools, but many consumers are being enrolled in costly overdraft protection programs without their consent." The legislation would require that consumers would have to "opt in" to overdraft protection programs, and banks would not only have to inform consumers when they are about to overdraw their accounts and allow them to cancel the transaction, but also would have to provide full, written disclosure of the overdraft policies to consumers.
But with banks countering massive losses in their mortgage portfolios with revenue-generating practices such as exorbitant overdraft fees, anytime rate hikes, universal default, and reducing the window between the time a bill is mailed and the payment due date, your Credit Mama is guessing that such a move will meet with great resistance by the banking industry lobbyists.