Emily Sortor  |  November 25, 2019

Category: Banking News

Top Class Actions’s website and social media posts use affiliate links. If you make a purchase using such links, we may receive a commission, but it will not result in any additional charges to you. Please review our Affiliate Link Disclosure for more information.

wells fargo bank signAccording to Democratic House Representative Katie Porter, Wells Fargo may have collected “hundreds of millions of dollars” in account fees from customers, because the bank presents confusing rules about the terms of its accounts.

Representative Porter is a member of the Financial Services Committee who recently sent a note to Charles W. Scharf, CEO and President of Wells Fargo, to this effect.

She requested that the bank provide details about this confusion, and the financial effects that the confusion has on Wells Fargo customers.

Rep. Porter claims that Wells Fargo knowingly provides “incomplete information over a span of multiple years” concerning its Everyday Checking and Opportunity Checking accounts. Reportedly, both accounts charge customers a monthly fee of $10 unless the customer fulfills at least one of several requirements.

The representative states that one of the requirements that customers can meet to avoid the $10 fee is to make a minimum of 10 transactions per month. Allegedly, ATM withdrawals do not count towards these 10 transactions. 

Many customers reportedly believed that ATM transactions did count towards the 10 transactions, and were hit with unexpected fees, if they had thought they were making enough transactions, but were not. 

Last month, Wells Fargo acknowledged the problem in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, noting that it was reviewing “certain past disclosures to customers regarding the minimum qualifying debit card usage for customers to receive a waiver of monthly service fees on certain consumer deposit accounts.”

In that filing, the bank noted that it expected to refund some of the fees collected. However, Rep. Porter requested more information in her letter to the bank, as Wells Fargo did not specify how many customers had been affected, or how many fees the bank would likely refund.

This issue of Wells Fargo bank fees comes amidst a rise in bank fees across the financial industry, says the Washington Post.

Reportedly, Bankrate says the average cost of an overdraft fee has risen from $21.57 in 1998 to $33.26 this last year. The fees associated with savings accounts and using ATMs from other financial institutions are also reportedly on the rise.

According to the Woodstock Institute’s Senior Vice President of Policy and Communication, Brent Adams, these fees have a significant impact on consumers. He says that the fees “have the effect of pushing more people out of the banking system,” and are often disclosed in a way that is confusing and easy to miss. 

The issue of confusing fee disclosures is not the only scandal regarding Wells Fargo that has made the news. In 2016, it was revealed that many of Wells Fargo’s employees had been opening fake bank accounts for customers who did not request them, or had been upgrading accounts without consumers’ consent. This was reportedly an attempt to meet lofty sales goals.

News sources estimate that around 3.5 million accounts were opened as a part of this scam. To make matters worse, some customers reportedly incurred fees and interest charges in connection with these fake accounts. 

Have you been charged unexpected banking fees from Wells Fargo or another financial institution? Let us know in the comments below.

We tell you about cash you can claim EVERY WEEK! Sign up for our free newsletter.


26 thoughts onWells Fargo Confusing Account Terms May Cost Customers Extra Fees, Lawmaker Says

  1. Everette Webb says:

    Please add me

  2. R. Allen says:

    US Bank has the same confusing terms stated in their Legal Notice regarding savings and money market fees relative to ATMs, Third Parties and Drafts, and does not clearly divulge that customers can tie more than one account together to forgo minimum balance fees.

  3. Q says:

    I have had Wells Fargo for years, I can truly say that I cannot stand this banking institution. I have many many times been charged overdraft fees for change to a couple of bucks, and I have over protection!! What is the point of having that if you still end up paying in the long run? I am not surprised at all that they are constantly in trouble and involved in lawsuits. I am waiting on the payment in regards to the CPI suit and this isn’t the first suit I have been involved in. Sad to say, this will not be the last with how greedy banks are now a days. I am willing to bet that I will be involved in the next one too!

  4. Gerald Hayden says:

    Honestly why do people bank with big banks if they know they are getting ripped off when there are better alternatives elsewhere it makes no sense and why do people bank with wells Fargo when the bank has a horrible reputation take your money elsewhere

  5. Adrienne Pennington says:

    I was unaware that my account had overdraft protection. I was charged $400 because Wells Fargo paid 2 reoccurring charges. One was $7.99 and the other was $14.99. For every day that I didn’t deposit the negative balance, I was charged a $35(-/+) which added up to the $400. Please add me.

  6. Caryn says:

    I got charged an overdraft fee via Wells Fargo for them to pull from our savings account to cover the over draft, even though we have direct deposit every Friday via our Pay Day. So on Thursday night we were charged an overdraft because they had to pull from our savings to cover it, only to have the direct deposit in our checking at 7am the next morning.

  7. KM says:

    They charge $37.00 even if you only overdraft a dollar. A few months back I paid them like $250.00 just in overdraft fees and when I called them they gave me just $37.00 back.

  8. Shannon porto says:

    If I talked up all the fees I have gotten from Wells Fargo I could probably buy my own bank

  9. Stacey says:

    Add me

  10. Troyd Drexler says:

    Add me

1 2 3

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. By submitting your comment and contact information, you agree to receive marketing emails from Top Class Actions regarding this and/or similar lawsuits or settlements, and/or to be contacted by an attorney or law firm to discuss the details of your potential case at no charge to you if you qualify. Required fields are marked *

Please note: Top Class Actions is not a settlement administrator or law firm. Top Class Actions is a legal news source that reports on class action lawsuits, class action settlements, drug injury lawsuits and product liability lawsuits. Top Class Actions does not process claims and we cannot advise you on the status of any class action settlement claim. You must contact the settlement administrator or your attorney for any updates regarding your claim status, claim form or questions about when payments are expected to be mailed out.