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Businesses will return $140 million in overdraft fees CFPB report


The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau headquarters in Washington.

Samuel Corum/Bloomberg via Getty Images

WASHINGTON — The nation’s federal consumer protection watchdog announced Wednesday that companies will refund $140 million to customers as a result of its work to uncover illegal so-called junk fees.

“The [Consumer Financial Protection Bureau] continues to uncover junk fee scams that violate the law and undermine consumer trust,” CFPB Director Rohit Chopra said in a statement. “We will continue to combat the illegal fees cropping up in consumer finance markets.”

The bureau on Wednesday released a report of supervisory highlights in tandem with the Biden administration’s newly announced policies targeting junk fees across industries. The report outlines the CFPB’s examination of fees related to deposit accounts — including overdraft and nonsufficient funds — auto loans and remittances between February and August 2023.

Financial institutions that hit customers with surprise overdraft and NSF fees account for $120 million of the $140 million that companies will reportedly refund to consumers following the March edition of the report, the CFPB found.

Nearly two-thirds of banks with more than $10 billion in assets have also eliminated NSF fees, saving customers nearly $2 billion a year, according to a separate report released Wednesday.

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Violations included in the supervisory highlights include monthly fees for paper bank statements that were never printed or mailed, charges for nonapplicable add-on services for car loans and undisclosed fees and failed remittances for international money transfers.

The CFPB has also directed service providers that process deposit, payment and data services for banks to stop contributing to violations. In one example from the report, a provider miscalculated refunds for add-on products for auto loans that were terminated early.

The report also briefly touches on transaction fees applied to student meal accounts. The CFPB has notified concerned parties that free alternatives are mandated under financial protection laws.

The companies that were part of the investigation were not identified in the report, but the CFPB has taken actions against Bank of America for repeatedly charging some fees and Wells Fargo for surprise overdraft fees.

Bank of America spokesman Bill Halldin said in a response that the lender “voluntarily reduced overdraft fees and eliminated all non-sufficient fund fees in the first half of 2022,” resulting in a 90% drop in revenue from those fees. Wells said it was “pleased to bring closure” to the banking, auto and mortgage issues found by the agency.

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