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A 'bricks-and-clicks'
account online
may not even save you a dime
By Karen
Christie Bankrate.com See
the most recent version of the checking study.
If
you're looking to open a checking account online with hopes of better
rates and fees, you probably want to avoid the Web sites of larger
banks with roots in the physical world.
While a number of the largest banks have gone
to the Web to attract new customers and allow existing consumers
to manage accounts online, not much else has changed, according
to Bankrate.com's fifth semiannual Checking Account Pricing Study.
The study shows that these so-called "bricks-and-clicks"
consider Internet access an added service, not an added value. These
banks price accounts opened online based on customer residence.
Customers receive the same pricing as the local markets.
If you open your account online and live in
Atlanta, you get Atlanta-based fees and interest rates, while a
customer living in California gets California-based fees and rates.
That's why these banks ask customers where they live in one form
or another.
What to expect
So, what can you expect if you decide to open a new checking account
online with one of these larger institutions, such as Bank One,
Bank of America, Citibank, First Union, Fleet, Chase Manhattan,
Wachovia and Wells Fargo?
When you contact one of these institutions,
one of the main questions the bank will ask is where you're from.
Bank One and First Union, for example, will ask for your ZIP code.
You'll then be given the same rates that you
would receive if you'd walked into your hometown branch of the same
institution. And the rates and fees for checking accounts in different
states -- and sometimes, different counties within a state-- are
often quite different. In addition, some institutions, such as Bank
One and Bank of America, don't offer all of their accounts in all
markets.
The Web has been able to reduce the geographical
influence on available bank rates and fees, but the best place to
find this new world of uniform rates and fees is with the online-only
banks.
--Posted: Oct. 2, 2000
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