Like the hat?
Banned
so glad I got the fuck away from wamu
Credit unions.SimleuqiR said:Google Bank please!
:lol
Not really, but we need a new bank or one that doesn't follow suit
Shin Johnpv said:Your dad sounds like an asshole. So the people who can't afford the fees should be the one to pay them?
Koshiba said:I currently use BoA but haven't yet had any odd fees or anything pop up.. then again I think I'm still under their "student plan" or something. However, I google for credit unions and they all have those fees, minimum monthly charges, minimum balances, etc.
Boards of Canada said:Welcome to Canada.
I pay $20 a month for unlimited transactions and a bunch of other stuff. My debit card is limited to $1000 a day, supposedly for security reasons. And I have no rewards.
You should have next to no fees at a CU. If you do, you need to move. The big ones are pretty similar.CFMOORE! said:i actually recently opened a credit union account JUST so I could get a 20% discount off my car insurance. never intended to use it beyond that since i've had wells fargo for like the last 11 years. i'm not fully versed on what fees i may or may not be getting charged with them. but i might just move all my money into the CU account once my stock proceeds clear in the wells account.
Of course to all of them. They may even give cashback when using the debit as a credit card (Saves money)captmcblack said:As a young NYCer, what credit union could I join that wouldn't fuck me like Chase/TD Bank/BOA/Citibank/etc will?
Will that credit union give me a debit card I can use for purchases in stores and online just like my Chase card? If they will, I'll switch today.
How do you find out if you are qualified? Is there some database that you can go to on the internet to point you in the right direction(borough, occupation, schools)?JGS said:You should have next to no fees at a CU. If you do, you need to move. The big ones are pretty similar.
Overdraft fees- There are two types; NSF & Overdraft. They both are the same costs but one pays the incoming debit, the other doesn't and that has everything to do with opting out.
Of course to all of them. They may even give cashback when using the debit as a credit card (Saves money)
The CU must offer checking accounts though. Many of them only have savings accounts and loans as options. Most have more options.
Otherwise, the extra fees are service based (Wires, replacement cards, Money orders, etc...) My credit union pays for checks.
Most people qualify for at least one credit union as many are community based now or there's a family member somehwere that has one. I qualify for about 5 of them in my city and have two of them now for the rates.
JdFoX187 said:A friend of mine is at the big credit union here, but he has to deal with shit like maintaining a minimum balance in both his savings and checking account, as well as fees for moving money from the savings to checking. But the thing that pisses me off the most is a limit on the amount of debit card transactions in a month, and the $500 limit imposed on his debit card. No thank you. There are times, when I use my debit card five or six times in one day. Then they say you can only draw out so much money, and it's a fucking hassle to get them to raise the limit, even for one day. To hell with that. Bank of America isn't charging, or bullshitting me yet, so as long as they don't, I'll stick with them.
Hwasong said:A Chase checking account actually requires at least one direct deposit of $500 OR five debit card uses per month to avoid fees, according to their website.
DarthWoo said:It would be nice if the free market actually worked and some banks decided to be fair and reasonable, thus inducing more people to create accounts with them instead and screwing over the banks that tried to screw people over. Alas.
Citizen's Bank has been pretty good for the past few years. They tried debit transaction fees for a little while early on, but obviously nobody liked that so they got rid of it quick.
You can Google or call them. Most have their qualifications right on the website.SolarPowered said:How do you find out if you are qualified? Is there some database that you can go to on the internet to point you in the right direction(borough, occupation, schools)?
Ripclawe said:Chase is about to fuck me over and way to go pro regulation champions.
The Fed has proposed capping debit-card merchant fees, known as interchange, at seven to 12 cents a transaction. That represents a drop of as much as 84% from the current average rate of 44 cents.
Regulations are directly to blame for this. I can't believe that's in dispute.Zaraki_Kenpachi said:Wait, are you honestly saying regulation is to blame for this?
Thanks for the info. I've always been curious about them so this isn't the first time I've looked them up. I see myself joining one, but it'll take some research and time.JGS said:You can Google or call them. Most have their qualifications right on the website.
As an example, I'll give you the link to one of the ones I have.
http://www.uky.edu/UKFCU/membership/
Most of them should show something like that.
Another thing is many of the large ones don't have many physical branches like the military ones. Heck, most of them are not prone to many locations so if location is a priority, community banks might be better for the local area, commercial banks are better for traveller's. UK's (& my other one, Member's Heritage) has an amazing online presence.
Everyone should have a credit union account for loans alone imo.
:lol You should really educate yourself then. Those poor poor banks, I hope they can feed there families at the end of the day now that they can't wrongfully manipulate things to make money they should have never been making.JGS said:Regulations are directly to blame for this. I can't believe that's in dispute.
Regulations based on emotional response are always a bad idea and the banking regulations that affected the general public was one of the worst cases of it.
Zaraki_Kenpachi said:Ugh, I still don't understand this logic that they will gain more money by pushing people away from their bank. I guess they're all banking on people will just take it?
Wait, are you honestly saying regulation is to blame for this?
JGS said:Regulations are directly to blame for this. I can't believe that's in dispute.
Regulations based on emotional response are always a bad idea and the banking regulations that affected the general public was one of the worst cases of it.
Uh, I've been in banking at the consumer level for at least ten years. I don't need more education, the common customer does. The've been duped by their own outrage.Zaraki_Kenpachi said::lol You should really educate yourself then. Those poor poor banks, I hope they can feed there families at the end of the day now that they can't wrongfully manipulate things to make money they should have never been making.
The regulations took away fees (& perks for that matter) that have largely always been optional such as Overdraft protection and replaced them with mandatory fees and less sympathy.otake said:How are regulations to blame? Is a regulation telling the banks to charge their customers for these services?
JGS said:Uh, I've been in banking at the consumer level for at least ten years. I don't need more education, the common customer does. The've been duped by their own outrage.
This has nothing to do with feeling sorry for banks, this has to do with feeling sorry for the customer and the idiocy in thinkng that a for profit banking system is all of a sudden going to say "Oh Well..."
Because of regulation in place, people are either paying more for services or not getting the services the used to get.
If the government wants to regulate something, fine. Just do it intelligently. This one was most certainly not.
captmcblack said:Tell me more about ING Direct.
What would I use ING for in conjunction with a credit union? Currently, I bank with Chase (used to be with Wamu).
- I need to have checking and savings. Ideally it would be free; I don't worry currently about maintaining balances since I get paid weekly.
- Ideally I'd have a checking/ATM card I can use as a card to pay for things directly (debit/credit) and online.
- Ideally, I'd have access to some ATM machines somewhere in NYC where I wouldn't have to pay $3 for the usage and $2 for a "non-bank ATM fee".
It would seem that joining a credit union would make it hard for me to do much banking in person, since there may be like 1 or 2 locations in the 5 boroughs total.
They have stricter auditing guidelines. Things that used to be standard operating procedure are not even allowed anymore.otake said:You keep saying regulation but witch? From the article all I got was the banks saying something like "regulations have increased our operating costs therefore we must charge our customers more". That makes sense to you?
otake said:I haven't had to bank in person in 6 years. What do you need to do in person that you can't do online, besides use an atm?