Goodbye to Free Checking Accounts
Monday, November 29, 2010
            
                        
                    Unable to earn as much as they once did on overdraft fees because of new federal rules, banks are offering fewer free-checking accounts and raising fees on noninterest-bearing accounts to make up for lost revenues.
A survey by Bankrate.com found an 11% drop in the number of free checking accounts from last year to this year. The study also discovered that banks are demanding higher minimum-average balances to avoid monthly fees, with the average now at $249.50. Last year, it was $185.75, and in 2008, it was $109.26. Thirty-five percent of noninterest bank accounts now have either a monthly fee or a minimum balance requirement, up from 24% last year.
Additionally, banks are charging higher monthly fees than ever before, with the average now up to $2.49, the highest level since Bankrate began its yearly surveys in 1998.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
Another Sign of the End of Free Checking (by Jennifer Saranow Schultz, New York Times)
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