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  • #16
    Most of the times an overdraft has happened, I often have cash on me that would cover the fee, just not the original transaction.

    I have an idea (that will most likely never work). Basically, if one is able to pay the fee within a reasonable timeframe in cash, it doesn't go onto the bank account as a further debit.

    Account Holder (AH) needs to make a $325 emergency purchase with a check or debit card; say the overdraft fee would be $25. That amount of cash, they have on hand (say they have $100, but they couldn't make the original purchase in cash for obvious reasons). They know they only have $200 in the account until next paycheck.

    AH gets an automated email from bank warning of the overdraft, with an option that if AH can pay the fee in-person at the bank within X days no fee will be applied to the account.

    AH is able to pay the fee in person the next business day; so rather than a $150 overdraft that could snowball, they only have the $125 from the purchase that is static.

    Overdraft=OD=overdose=both can kill you if you're not careful. Hmmm...
    Last edited by Dreamstalker; 06-05-2009, 03:36 PM.
    "Any state, any entity, any ideology which fails to recognize the worth, the dignity, the rights of Man...that state is obsolete."

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    • #17
      Originally posted by katie kaboom View Post
      That's the problem I had with the banks. There were times when a credit or debit card should have been declined and it wasn't. They put it through so they can hit you with all kinds of fees.

      Practices like that need to be outlawed as far as i'm concerned.

      I had that same problem with my bank.

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