Chime is one of the most popular financial technology companies in the US, with 14+ million customers. It’s not technically a bank — partner banks (Bancorp Bank and Stride Bank) hold your deposits — but Chime’s appeal is its aggressive elimination of fees that traditional banks charge. No monthly fees, no overdraft fees, no minimum balance requirements, and a unique SpotMe overdraft coverage feature. This review covers what Chime offers, what it doesn’t, and who it’s best for in 2026.

Bottom line: Chime is best for people who want genuinely fee-free banking with early direct deposit and SpotMe overdraft coverage. If you want the highest savings rates, CDs, or investing integration, look at SoFi, Marcus, or Ally instead.

Chime at a Glance

Feature Details
Checking Fee-free, $0 minimum
Savings APY 2.0%
Monthly fees $0 (all accounts)
Overdraft fee $0 (SpotMe up to $200)
ATM network 60,000+ fee-free
Early direct deposit Up to 2 days early
Mobile app 4.8/5 (iOS), 4.6/5 (Android)
Credit builder card Yes — no interest, no annual fee
Physical branches None
FDIC insured Yes (via partner banks)
Customer service In-app chat, phone

Accounts Available

Checking Account (Spending Account)

Feature Details
Monthly fee $0
Minimum balance $0
Overdraft fee $0
SpotMe coverage Up to $200 (with qualifying DD)
Early direct deposit Up to 2 days early
Debit card Visa
Mobile check deposit Yes
Bill pay Yes (through third-party pay anyone)
Cash deposits Yes — at 90,000+ retail locations
Zelle No (Chime uses its own P2P system)

High Yield Savings Account

Feature Details
APY 2.0%
Monthly fee $0
Minimum balance $0
Round Ups Yes — rounds debit purchases to nearest dollar, saves difference
Automatic savings Yes — percentage of direct deposit

How the Savings Compares

Bank Savings APY
Marcus 4.30%
Discover 4.20%
SoFi (with DD) 4.0%
Ally 4.00%
Capital One 360 3.90%
Chime 2.0%

Chime’s 2.0% savings rate is significantly below competitors. If maximizing interest is important, Chime’s savings account is not competitive. Many Chime customers keep their checking at Chime and savings at a higher-APY bank.

SpotMe Overdraft Coverage

Feature Details
Coverage limit Up to $200
Starting limit $20 (increases with usage)
Fee $0 (never)
Qualifying requirement $200+/month in direct deposits
Applies to Debit card purchases + ATM withdrawals
Repayment Automatic from next deposit
Does NOT apply to ACH transfers, checks, pay anyone transfers
Tip option Optional (you can tip Chime, not required)

SpotMe is genuinely valuable. The average overdraft fee at a traditional bank is $35. If you’d otherwise overdraft even once per year, SpotMe saves you money immediately.

Chime Credit Builder

Feature Details
Annual fee $0
Interest rate 0% (no interest charges ever)
Credit check None (no hard pull)
How it works Transfer money from checking → spend up to that amount → Chime reports to bureaus
Credit bureaus reported All 3 (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion)
Credit limit Equal to what you transfer (your money)
Minimum deposit $0

This is one of the best credit-building products available. It’s risk-free — you can’t overspend because the limit is your own deposited money, and there are no interest charges or annual fees.

Automatic Savings Features

Feature How It Works
Round Ups Every debit purchase rounds up to the nearest dollar; difference goes to savings
Save When I Get Paid Set a percentage (e.g., 10%) of every direct deposit to automatically move to savings
Combination Use both for passive savings accumulation

Example: If you spend $3.40 on coffee, $0.60 gets moved to savings. Over hundreds of transactions, this adds up to $20–$50/month without effort.

App Experience

Feature Rating
Design / UX Excellent — simple, clean, fast
Account overview Very good — checking + savings at a glance
SpotMe tracking Good — shows current limit and usage
Credit Builder Good — shows credit score and payment history
Transfers Good — instant between Chime accounts
Notifications Excellent — instant transaction alerts
Budgeting tools Basic — no categories or spending analysis
Overall 4.5/5

Fee Comparison

Fee Chime SoFi Discover Bank of America
Monthly fee $0 $0 $0 $12 (waivable)
Overdraft fee $0 (SpotMe) $0 $0 $35
Minimum balance $0 $0 $0 $1,500
ATM (in-network) $0 $0 $0 $0
ATM (out-of-network) $2.50 Reimbursed $0 $2.50–$5
Foreign transaction $0 1% N/A 3%

Pros and Cons

Pros

Advantage Why It Matters
Truly fee-free banking No monthly, overdraft, or minimum balance fees
SpotMe ($200 overdraft) Fee-free overdraft coverage
Credit Builder card Build credit with zero risk or interest
Early direct deposit Get paid up to 2 days early
Round Ups savings Passive automatic savings
60,000+ free ATMs Extensive network
Cash deposits at retailers 90,000+ locations (Walgreens, 7-Eleven, etc.)
Excellent mobile app Simple, fast, well-designed

Cons

Drawback Impact
Very low savings APY (2.0%) Far below Marcus (4.30%), SoFi (4.0%)
Not a real bank Fintech using partner banks
No CDs or money market Limited product selection
No joint accounts Individual only
No investing integration Must use a separate brokerage
No Zelle Uses Chime’s own P2P instead
$2.50 out-of-network ATM fee SoFi reimburses; Discover charges $0
No physical branches Online only
SpotMe requires direct deposit Must have $200+/month DD

Who Should Use Chime

Situation Chime? Why
Wants zero-fee banking Yes One of the most fee-free options
Has been hit by overdraft fees Yes SpotMe eliminates overdraft costs
Wants to build credit from scratch Yes Credit Builder is excellent
Wants early direct deposit Yes Up to 2 days early
Wants passive automatic savings Yes Round Ups + Save When Paid
Wants highest savings APY No 2.0% is well below competitors
Needs CDs or money market No Not available
Wants joint accounts No Not available
Needs branch access No None
Wants investing integration No Not available

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy