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Fall 2003 Checking Account Pricing Study: key findings

Fees are up. It costs more to open an account. Interest rates are so low they aren't worth chasing.

Those are some of the key findings of the Fall 2003 Checking Account Pricing Study, Bankrate.com's semiannual look at the consumers' must-have banking account. The findings are based on checking account data Bankrate researchers gathered on 490 accounts from the top 10 institutions in the 25 largest markets. The study includes one interest-paying and one noninterest checking account from each institution, wherever available. The accounts selected are the ones that can be opened for the lowest minimum deposit. The study also includes 29 online accounts from 18 institutions.

Here's a look at the key findings:

Fall 2003 checking account study key findings
  • Average yield
  • Online access availability
  • Average minimum to open interest-bearing account
  • Average monthly service fee
  • Average minimum to open noninterest account
  • Average ATM surcharge
  • Average minimum to avoid fees in interest account
  • Average fee to use another institution's ATM
  • Average minimum to avoid fees in noninterest account
  • Percentage of institutions with ATM surcharges
  • Average bounced check (NSF) fee
  • Annual surcharge estimate (in billions)
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    Average yield: Previous studies have shown that interest-bearing accounts aren't worth it, and the current low-interest rate environment hammers home that point. The average checking account yield has fallen to an all-time low of just 0.27 percent -- exactly one-fifth the rate that was being given to consumers five years ago.

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    Average minimum to open interest-bearing account: If you want to have an account that pays interest, be prepared to fork over more money to open the account. The minimum to open and earn interest is up to $495. Five years ago, it was $347. This is the first of two ways that interest-bearing accounts force you to tie up more money to earn little benefit. The other is that you must keep more money in the account to avoid monthly fees on interest-bearing checking accounts.

    Average minimum to open and earn interest

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    Average minimum to open noninterest account: Forgo that pittance of an interest rate and you can open an account for far less. The average minimum to open a noninterest checking account is $59.49 -- less than an eighth of the average cost to open an interest-bearing account.

    Average minimum to open (noninterest)

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    Average minimum to avoid fees in interest account: You have to park a lot of money to earn interest and avoid monthly fees. Bankrate's survey finds you have to keep $2,258 tied up in an interest-bearing account to avoid being dinged by monthly fees. That's up sharply in the past year -- in the fall of 2002, the service-charge cutoff amount was $392 lower.

    Average minimum to avoid fees (interest)

    (continued on next page)
    -- Posted: Oct. 31, 2003
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    See Also
    MAIN: Bankrate Checking Account Pricing Study
    Compare checking account rates in your area
    Checking glossary
    More checking stories

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    NATIONAL OVERNIGHT AVERAGES
    Interest checking 0.47%
    MMA 0.47%
    $10K MMA 0.54%



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