Why You Should Never Own a Debit
Card
Why You Should Never Own a Debit Card
-by Caroline Fouts
(C)Copyright By Jay Peters All Rights Reserved
http://www.CreditSecretsBible.org
Debit cards have become a very popular way to pay for everything from
fast food to rental cars. The Federal Reserve reports that debit card
transactions have been growing more than 20 percent annually and have
surpassed credit card transactions.
The appeal is understandable. Debit cards are quick and easy to use.
But using a debit card can cost you hundreds and even thousands of dollars.
We’ll show you why you should never carry a debit card.
More Risky than Carrying Cash
In it’s 2007 Debit Issuer Study, PULSE EFT Association reported
that U.S. financial institutions lost an estimated $662 million to debit
card fraud in 2005. There is no end in sight.
You’d be safer carrying cash. Although you don’t have much
recourse if it’s lost or stolen, but at least your loss is limited
to the amount of the missing currency.
Carry a debit card, and you put the entire balance in your bank account
at risk. If you link your checking account to your savings account to
avoid overdrafts, you put the balance in both accounts at risk.
More Dangerous than a Credit Card
If a thief gets your credit card, the federal Truth in Lending Act limits
your liability for any fraudulent credit card charges to $50. You may
not have to pay even that amount, as many financial institutions don’t
impose any charge on their defrauded customers. And while the theft is
being investigated, you can refuse to pay any part of the unauthorized
charges.
Debit cards fall under a completely different law, the Electronic Fund
Transfer Act. To limit your liability to $50, you have to notify your
bank within two business days of discovering that you’re debit card
has been lost or stolen. Wait longer than that, but give your bank notice
of the fraudulent transactions within 60 days of when your statement is
mailed, and your maximum liability jumps to $500. Miss that deadline and
you could lose all the money in your account.
Because the debit card accesses fund directly out of your account, you
can be left without your grocery money while the fraud claim is being
investigated.
The $350 Taco
One trip to Taco Bell was enough to send Joseph Rizk’s checking
account into freefall.
Rizk made the mistake of paying for fast food with his debit card. He
figures he spent only about $5 more than he had in his account. Unfortunately,
by the time he realized there was a problem, the bank had hit him about
$350 in overdraft fees. At $25 to $35 per occurrence, it’s easy
to rack up hundreds of dollars in needless NSF fees.
"I overdrew, and they pretty much pummeled me with charges,"
said Rizk.
The Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer group, estimates that overdraft
charges cost people about $17.5 billion each year. The center’s
research reveals that about 45 percent of those overdrafts are the result
of using a debit card or taking out cash from the ATM.
Banks used to refuse any debit card transaction that would overdraw a
depositor’s account. But not any more. Banks could warn depositors
when their accounts are close to being overdrawn. But they don’t.
Instead most financial institutions automatically enroll their depositors
in a program that loans them the amount of the overdraft—but at
a steep price. The Center for Responsible Lending estimates that Banks
that offer these lending programs can expect a sharp increase in overdraft
revenues, as much as 200 to 400 percent.
Calculated as an interest rate, rather than a fee, the cost of these loans
is astronomical. The average amount of a point-of-sale purchase that overdraws
an account is $14.75. The average fee is more than double that amount.
According to the agency, most consumers only use these loans for a few
days. So on an overdraft loan, the annual percentage rate can be as high
as 20,000 percent.
In defense of this practice, bankers like to point out that it’s
the responsibility of the account holders to monitor their account balances
and avoid overdrafts.
Of course, that requires the account holder to know how much money is
in their account.
How Can You Know Your Account Balance?
R. C. Welborn, learned the hard way about the risks of using debit cards.
To make sure he didn’t overdraw his account, he checked his online
bank statement. Since it showed $80 in his checking account, he fell free
to make several small purchases a few days before his paycheck was deposited.
Using his debit card, he bought two gasoline fill-ups, snacks and cigarettes,
totaling about $65.
Although the balance in his account was more than enough to cover the
price of what he bought, when he checked his account about ten days later,
he found he had incurred $120 in overdraft fees.
“I couldn’t figure out what was going on, I knew I had money
in the bank,” Welborn remembered.
Like most people, Welborn didn’t know that merchants can place a
pre-authorization hold on a customer’s account. In situations where
the exact amount of the transaction isn’t settled when the approval
is given, it makes sense a merchant would want reserve a little more to
cover their transaction. If you give your debit card to a waiter, hotel
clerk, car rental company, or gas station, the merchant is likely to get
an approval of a higher amount—to cover any tip on their service,
higher purchase amount, or room service. Car rental companies that accept
debit cards routinely place holds in the amount of $300 to $500.
Now Welborn understands that the pre-authorization hold the gas station
put on his account resulted in overdrafts on at least six other small
transactions. He estimates that he paid over $2,000 in overdraft fees
because he used a debit card.
“The quickest way to bankrupt yourself is not knowing what’s
going on with your debit card, but if you don’t get a warning when
you’re doing it, how to you know?” Welborn asked. “I
won’t touch a debit card anymore. I do everything with cash.”
Pre-authorization holds placed by merchants are just one of the factors
that make it difficult, if not impossible for a depositor to know his
or her available account balance. It’s becoming more difficult to
tell when a transaction hits an account.
Some debit cards allow for both signature-based debit card transactions,
that, like a check, take a few days to clear, and PIN-based transactions,
which hit the depositor’s account instantly. Take into account paper
checks that merchants and service providers frequently convert into electronic
drafts, and, without real-time account information, it’s impossible
to know what’s in any checking account.
Nessa Feddis, senior federal counsel for the American Bankers Association
in Washington explains that even the banks don’t have up-to-the-minute
information. "We don't have real-time transactions. There will always
be outstanding transactions that the consumer has authorized but have
not hit the bank."
Comparing debit card transactions to a plastic checks, some financial
institutions instruct depositors to keep track of their purchases, just
like in the old days when checks and drafts were the only way to draw
funds from a checking account.
But in the old days, a depositor could wait for their bank statement to
reconcile their balance. Now, by the time the statement arrives, the damage
may already be done.
"The debit card is really where it's a serious problem," argues
Ed Mierzwinski, the consumer program director of the U.S. Public Interest
Research Group in Washington. "It's harder to keep track of your
balance because of the tricks banks use."
In addition, there are no regulations or statutes that limit the amount
of a pre-authorization hold, or the length of time that it can be imposed
on an account.
When Penny Chaisson’s bought $20 worth of gas, the station put a
hold of $75 on her account, more than 3 times the amount of her purchase.
She contacted both the gas station and her bank, but each pointed a finger
at the other. Even after escalating her complaint to management, it was
72 hours before the hold was released.
These holds stay in place until the bank or the requesting merchant gets
around to releasing the amount held in excess of the purchase amount.
Generally this takes a few days, but it could be longer.
How You Can Protect Yourself
Promptly reconciling your account to the monthly statement or monitoring
your account balance on-line won’t always prevent loses associated
with the use of a debit card.
There is only one solution—Don’t carry a debit card. When
opening a checking account, it is standard practice for a bank to send
the depositor a combination debit/ATM card. However you can pick and choose
the services you want to accept. If you want to avoid the risks of having
a debit card, but would like the convenience of ATM access, you bank will
issue you a card for just that purpose, without the debit card function.
You can always pay for your purchases with cash or a credit card, since
both are safer than using a debit card.
==============================
Jay Peters is the founder of Consumer
Publishing Group which publishes the
Credit Secrets Bible (in print since
1994).
For more information on the CREDIT
SECRETS BIBLE you may visit:
http://www.CreditSecretsBible.org
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