Watch Sen. Kennedy Absolutely Torched Eric Swalwell on the Senate Floor
Justice Jackson Was the Lone Dissenter in This Case, and She Was Not...
That Atlantic Hit Piece on Kash Patel Just Got Worse
Law Professor Is Very Worried About This Trend Among Elected Dems
Bill Maher Would Like to Meet and Thank This Hollywood Icon
Kamala Harris Has Adopted Another Fake Accent
Senator Chris Murphy Is Rooting for Iran and Here's the Proof
Illinois Jury Lists Contain Dead People. What About the Voter Rolls? – The...
And Then There Were None
Shocking Undercover Videos Expose Horrors of Joe Biden’s Unaccompanied Child Trafficking S...
Congress Cleaned House — Under Duress
Muslims Who Slaughter Christians and Jews Who Spit on Christians
Take Your Middle-Aged Child to Retirement Day — Before It’s Too Late
Space Exploration Without Government
Mississippi Overtakes Britain
OPINION

BofA Calls Off Debit-Fee Plan

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
BofA Calls Off Debit-Fee Plan

Bank of America Corp. is dropping its plan to charge customers $5 a month for making purchases with their debit cards, a person familiar with the situation said.

Advertisement

The move is a dramatic retreat following decisions by several rivals in recent days to drop customer tests of the new fees. SunTrust Banks Inc. and Regions Financial Corp. also said Monday that they will stop charging customers for debit-card transactions.

Bank of America decided against the fees due to negative customer feedback on the plan and the moves by rivals, which left the Charlotte, N.C., lender as the only big bank planning to levy the fee on some customers next year.

Bank of America will formally announce the decision today, this person said.

The announcements follow decisions last week by Wells Fargo & Co. and J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. to drop customer tests of the new fees.

The about-face represents a rare concession to customer sensitivities over fees. Hit hard by a soft economy and tightening regulations, banks have been adding fees on services, charging for instance for many checking accounts that used to be free.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement