Will Debit Cards Soon Charge Monthly Fees?

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The following post comes from partner site LowCards.com.

New interchange regulations for debit cards go into effect Oct. 1, but many banks are already adjusting to this loss of revenue by creating new fees and eliminating rewards programs.

Wells Fargo announced last week that it will test a $3 monthly fee for debit card users in five states: Georgia, Oregon, New Mexico, Nevada, and Washington. Customers can avoid the fee if they don’t use their debit card or sign up for designated checking accounts. Wells Fargo is also eliminating its debit card rewards program for all customers on Oct. 8.

Wells Fargo is not the first to make changes, nor will it be the last.

In June, SunTrust bank launched “Everyday Checking” that charges customers $5 per month for debit card use. Regions Bank will add a monthly $4 debit fee to certain accounts in October. In addition to testing a monthly fee for debit card users in northern Wisconsin, Chase ended its debit card rewards program for all customers in July.

“Banks generally give consumers a way to avoid these fees, but they may require a higher minimum balance or a broader banking relationship,” says Bill Hardekopf, CEO of LowCards.com and author of The Credit Card Guidebook. “Unfortunately, the customers who can’t afford to carry a higher minimum balance are the ones who will end up paying the fee.”

Consumers can still find a bank that does not charge a fee for debit card usage such as Citibank or Capital One. In addition, Citibank and U.S. Bank continue to offer reward points for debit card usage if you have a personal checking account linked with qualifying products and services.

Under the new rules, required by the Durbin Amendment to the Dodd-Frank law, the maximum permissible interchange fee that an issuer may receive for an electronic debit transaction will be the sum of 21 cents per transaction and 5 basis points multiplied by the value of the transaction. This cuts debit fees roughly in half, as merchants previously paid an average of 44 cents per debit transaction.

Banks fought hard against the interchange fee regulations because interchange fees generated an estimated $16 billion in 2009, according to the Federal Reserve. Debit usage grew – and became more popular than credit cards.

Banks even added rewards programs to debit cards to entice customers to sign instead of swipe for a purchase. Signing meant the purchase went through the processing system and generated a higher fee for the bank. The interchange fee basically paid for the cost of the rewards. Rewards were higher for credit cards because banks made more money from the interchange fee on credit cards.

“These new rules and restrictions cost banks billions of dollars and they have to make it up somewhere. It is always the customer who ends up paying more,” Hardekopf says. “If monthly fees for debit card users prove successful in these test markets, look for these banks to assess this fee to all their customers as well as for other major banks to follow.”

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