(USA Today) The Biden administration on Wednesday proposed a new consumer-protection rule aimed at cutting expensive overdraft fees that banks charge by more than half as part of President Joe Biden’s efforts to curb so-called “junk fees.”
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau rule would close a regulatory loophole that exempts overdraft lending services from provisions in the federal Truth in Lending Act of 1968. As a result of the loophole, banks rake in billions in revenue by charging fees, typically about $35, when a debit-card transaction forces the balance of an account into negative.
Under the new rule, banks could still offer overdraft loans to consumers − but the banks would have to be compliant with federal consumer protections for lending. That includes disclosing interest rates and fees for overdraft transactions, identical to the requirements for credit cards and other loans.
Future overdraft fees charged by banks would also not be allowed to exceed the banks’ losses. A bank could either calculate its owns fees through a “breakeven standard” or rely on a “breakeven fee” set by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
The CFPB has not finalized an amount but is exploring overdraft fees of $3, $6, $7, or $14, plus $.50 per transaction.