Banks could charge £2.50 every time we use a cash machine
November 23, 2009 by admin
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By
Becky Barrow
Last updated at 8:30 AM on 23rd November 2009
Banks could charge customers to take out money from a cash machine, campaigners fear.They believe the banks will introduce new ‘rip-off’ charges if they lose a long-running court battle this week with the Office of Fair Trading.It could signal the end of the free banking currently enjoyed by millions whose accounts never go into the red.
‘Rip-off’: Campaigners believe banks will start charging customers to take out money from a cash machine
One possibility is that customers could be charged to use the 39,000 cash machines in the UK that are free at present.Industry experts believe a levy of up to £2.50 could be imposed per withdrawal. Another potential outcome is that banks could force customers to pay a monthly fee to bank with them.On Wednesday, the Supreme Court is expected to clear the way for a decision that overdraft charges imposed by banks over many years were unfair.Banks could be forced to pay refunds totalling more than £10billion to customers hit with extortionate penalty charges.
The consumer group Which? estimates that around 12million people have been hit with bank charges since 2001, but about two-thirds have not asked for their money back.Eddy Weatherill, from the Independent Banking Advisory Service, said yesterday that banks will always ‘profiteer where they can’.He said: ‘Banks think they can charge whatever they like - and get away with it. There is no doubt that they will bring in new fees, or higher existing fees, wherever they can.’Phil Jones, a personal finance campaigner from Which?, said: ‘It is like a balloon. When you push in one part, it comes out in another. The banks are consistently finding sneaky ways to make money out of people.’ Which? pointed to latest figures, from the Bank of England showing the average overdraft rate has hit 18.9 per cent. Last week, Santander, owner of Abbey, introduced a ‘fee-free’ current account. The Zero Current Account has no overdraft fees, no charges for bounced payments, no charges for taking out cash overseas and no foreign exchange fees. But it is only available to those who take out, or already have, a mortgage with the bank or one of its new subsidiaries, Bradford & Bingley and Alliance & Leicester. Experts say other banks will follow suit, which will benefit many customers - but freeze out millions more. Wednesday’s judgment is not the end of the battle. It will only dictate whether the Office of Fair Trading has the right to determine what is, and what is not, a fair bank charge. If the OFT wins, as expected, it will announce its findings early next year.
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Well we wont put our money IN then SIMPLES!!!!!!
- angelgard, Lancs England, 23/11/2009 09:55
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should of let them go to the wall, leeches them and the goverment
- scott, wakefield, 23/11/2009 09:53
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So back we all go, out of the cold and rain, back into the BANKS themselves…….
- Robert, Worcester UK, 23/11/2009 09:52
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So if you can’t live without an account with a bank, then the only way to limit the cost is to withdraw the maxinum for the month out of the bank & then just use cash, You never know it may give you a real feel for the cost of living if you can see your money going down as you spend through the month, ever give you an incentive to see if you can live within your budget with a few bob left over at the end of the month.
I play this game as I am a young pensioner, I feel a real sense of achievemnt if I can save for a shopping trip or buy something special.
Don’t worry, I am not on another planet, I do realise for many this is going to be a tax-to-far.
- Sue, Essex, 23/11/2009 09:52
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Come on you punters!Someone has to cough up for a trivial bonus. Taxes are just not enough.
- The banking industry, Winchester, 23/11/2009 09:48
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It looks like the charging to use a cash machine is already in the PIPE LINE
That is why they are NOW saying they want to do away with the Cheque book
It is all becoming clear now
The Banks are NOT satisfied with a normal profit they want to rip everbody off
and they can DO this by getting rid of the Cheque Book which cost about a £1 to process where as a Direct Debit cost’’s about £2 to £3 and this on top of the extra for a Direct Debit ( IS A RIP OFF )
This shows just what the Banks are up to
- Alan Hammond, Egham Surrey, 23/11/2009 09:47
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[...] Which? and Citizens Advice Bureau. But also a relief given the sabre-rattling threats of universal cash machine charges. The banks have won the battle, essentially on a technicality: that the OFT did not have the power [...]