When you overdraw your bank account, your bank will either cover the transaction and charge you an overdraft fee — typically $10–$36 — or decline the transaction outright. Which outcome you get depends on the bank, the type of transaction, and whether you’ve opted in to overdraft coverage. A single overdraft fixed within a day is a minor inconvenience. An ignored negative balance, on the other hand, can escalate into account closure, a collections entry on your credit report, and a ChexSystems record that blocks you from opening a new bank account for up to five years.

What Happens Step-by-Step

The consequences of an overdraft scale directly with how long you leave the account negative. The first 24 hours are cheap and easy to fix — you pay one fee and deposit funds. Beyond that, additional fees layer on top until the bank eventually closes the account.

Timeline What Happens
Transaction hits with no funds Bank either covers it (overdraft) or declines it (NSF)
Same day Overdraft fee of $10–$36 charged to your account
Days 1–5 Account stays negative; some banks charge per-item fees on additional transactions
Days 5–7 Extended/sustained overdraft fee may be charged ($15–$36)
Days 7–30 Bank sends notices to bring account current; additional extended fees possible
Days 30–60 Bank may close the account and charge off the negative balance
After closure Negative balance sent to a collections agency
Collections Account reported to ChexSystems; may affect ability to open new accounts for 5 years

The most important window is the first 24–48 hours. Many banks now offer a same-day or next-business-day grace period where no fee is charged if you deposit enough to cover the negative balance before the cutoff. If you’ve just overdrawn and you’re reading this now, depositing funds immediately is the highest-leverage action you can take. For a focused guide on the immediate steps, see what to do if you accidentally overdrafted your account.


Overdraft Fees by Bank (2026)

Overdraft fee policies have shifted dramatically since 2021. Many major banks eliminated overdraft fees entirely under regulatory pressure from the CFPB; others have reduced fees or introduced grace periods. The split between fee-charging and fee-free banks is now a meaningful factor when choosing where to bank.

Banks That Eliminated Overdraft Fees

Bank Overdraft Fee What Happens Instead
Ally Bank $0 Declines transactions or covers them free
Capital One $0 No overdraft fees on any account
Citibank $0 Declines transactions
Discover $0 Declines transactions
Chime $0 SpotMe covers up to $200 free
SoFi $0 Covers overdrafts up to a limit

Ally, Capital One, and Chime have made their $0 overdraft policies permanent features of their accounts — not promotional offers. If overdraft risk is a recurring concern for you, switching to one of these is the most complete solution available. See the Ally Bank review and Capital One 360 review for a full comparison of what each account offers beyond the overdraft policy.

Banks That Still Charge Overdraft Fees

Bank Overdraft Fee Grace Period Daily Limit
Chase $34 1 business day to deposit 3 per day
Bank of America $10 1 business day
Wells Fargo $35 End of business day
US Bank $36 4 per day
PNC $36 4 per day
Truist $36 1 business day
Regions $36 1 business day 6 per day
TD Bank $35
Huntington $15 24-hour grace period

Fees current as of early 2026. Banks update overdraft policies frequently — check your bank’s current account agreement for the exact terms.

Chase and Wells Fargo give you until the end of the next business day to deposit funds before the $34–$35 fee is charged — a meaningful grace period if you catch the overdraft quickly. Bank of America dropped its fee to $10, now one of the lowest among major fee-charging banks. For a full side-by-side of overdraft policies across all major banks, see overdraft fees by bank. For the broader picture of what banks charge across all fee types, the bank fees comparison is a useful reference.


Overdraft vs. NSF: The Difference

These two terms are often confused, but they describe opposite outcomes. With an overdraft, the bank pays the transaction on your behalf and charges you a fee. With an NSF (non-sufficient funds) situation, the bank refuses the transaction and either charges a separate NSF fee or simply declines it.

Feature Overdraft NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds)
What happens Bank covers the transaction Bank declines the transaction
Fee $10–$36 $0–$34
Transaction completes? Yes No
Your balance goes negative? Yes Stays at $0 or wherever it was
Requires opt-in? Yes (for debit card/ATM) No
Recurring bills Often covered automatically Bill bounces — may trigger late fee from biller

Since 2010, Regulation E requires banks to get your explicit opt-in before covering debit card and ATM overdrafts. If you have not opted in, those transactions are simply declined — no fee, no completed purchase. That’s usually the better outcome. However, checks and ACH auto-payments can still overdraft your account regardless of your opt-in status, because the Regulation E opt-in rule does not apply to them. If a recurring utility bill or subscription auto-debits more than your balance, your account can go negative even if you’ve never opted in to overdraft coverage.


What Triggers an Overdraft

Not all transactions carry the same overdraft risk. Understanding which transaction types can overdraft without your consent is essential for preventing surprise negative balances.

Transaction Type Can Overdraft Without Opt-In? Typical Scenario
Debit card purchase No (requires opt-in) Buying groceries with insufficient funds
ATM withdrawal No (requires opt-in) Withdrawing cash you don’t have
Check Yes Writing a check that bounces
ACH auto-pay Yes Monthly bill auto-debits more than your balance
Recurring subscription Depends on bank Netflix charges when balance is $2
Bank fee Yes Monthly maintenance fee when balance is zero

The most common overdraft trigger for most people is ACH auto-pay — a utility bill, insurance premium, or loan payment that hits on a date when their balance is lower than expected. This is especially risky when payday falls a day or two after a bill’s auto-debit date. If you’ve had a check bounce rather than an overdraft, see why did my check bounce for the specific consequences of returned checks, which differ from standard overdrafts. For more on avoiding this entirely by building a small cash buffer, see the emergency fund guide.


Extended Overdraft Fees

Some banks compound the initial overdraft fee with extended fees that charge additional amounts every few days the account stays negative. These are the most dangerous fees — a forgotten $15 overdraft can become $100+ in under two weeks.

Bank Extended Overdraft Fee When It’s Charged
US Bank $25 After 7 consecutive negative days
Regions $36 Every 5 business days
TD Bank $20 After 4 business days
Wells Fargo None Eliminated
Chase None Eliminated

To illustrate the math: at Regions, a $36 extended fee charged every 5 business days means a forgotten $10 overdraft costs $36 (initial) + $36 (day 5) + $36 (day 10) = $108 in just two weeks — on a $10 shortfall. Wells Fargo and Chase eliminated extended overdraft fees as part of their 2022–2023 policy overhauls, which is one reason their total overdraft cost is now more predictable even if the per-occurrence fee is higher.


What Happens If You Don’t Pay the Negative Balance

Ignoring a negative balance is significantly more costly than paying it. The progression from overdraft to collections to ChexSystems report happens on a predictable timeline, and each stage adds consequences that compound over years, not just days.

Stage Consequence
Days 1–30 Fees accumulate; account restricted; bank sends notices
Days 30–60 Account closed by bank (“involuntary closure”)
After closure Negative balance “charged off” — bank writes it off as a loss
Collections Bank sells debt to collection agency
ChexSystems report Negative record placed on your ChexSystems report
Up to 5 years ChexSystems record remains (even if debt is later paid)
Credit report Collections account may appear on Equifax, TransUnion, and Experian

An involuntary account closure is one of the more damaging outcomes in everyday banking — more so than many people realize. For a full breakdown of what happens and what your options are after the bank closes your account, see what happens if a bank closes your account.

ChexSystems: The Banking History Report

ChexSystems is a consumer reporting agency, similar to Equifax or TransUnion for credit, but specifically for banking history. Most banks and credit unions pull your ChexSystems report when you apply to open a new checking or savings account.

ChexSystems Impact Consequence
Account closed for negative balance Reported to ChexSystems
Unpaid negative balance Makes opening new accounts very difficult
Record duration 5 years from the incident date
Free annual report Available at ChexSystems.com
Removing accurate negative marks Pay the debt, then request removal; not guaranteed
Disputing inaccurate marks File a dispute directly with ChexSystems

A ChexSystems record does not directly affect your FICO credit score — it operates as a separate database. But it effectively blacklists you from opening a standard checking account at most banks for up to five years. This is why paying off a negative balance promptly matters so much: letting it escalate to an involuntary closure creates a banking problem that outlasts the original debt by years.

Second-Chance Accounts

If you have a ChexSystems record, these accounts are designed to give you access to banking without requiring a clean banking history:

Account Monthly Fee Notes
Chime $0 No ChexSystems check
Varo $0 No ChexSystems check
Chase Secure Banking $4.95/month Designed for second-chance customers
Bank of America SafePass $4.95/month Second-chance account
Wells Fargo Clear Access $5/month (waivable) No overdraft fees
GoBank $8.95/month (waivable) No credit check

The fee-free options — Chime and Varo — are the most accessible starting point. Both also have no overdraft fees, so you’re building a clean history without the risk of the same problem recurring. See the Chime review for a full breakdown of their features. For a broader look at banks that don’t charge fees, the no-fee, no-minimum banks guide covers the full landscape.


How Overdraft Protection Works

Overdraft protection is a separate service from overdraft coverage — it links another account or credit line to your checking so funds are automatically pulled before the account goes negative, typically avoiding the overdraft fee entirely.

Protection Type How It Works Typical Fee
Linked savings account Transfers from savings to cover shortfall $0–$12.50 per transfer
Linked credit card Cash advance from credit card covers the gap Cash advance interest (25%+)
Overdraft line of credit Small credit line attached to checking account Interest on amount used
Same-day grace period Bank gives you until end of business day to deposit Free if you deposit in time

Linking a savings account is the most cost-effective option for most people — a $10–$12.50 transfer fee is far cheaper than a $35 overdraft fee. Note that a savings account can only be overdrawn in the same way as a checking account in certain circumstances; the can you overdraft a savings account guide explains when and how this can happen. Ally and Capital One have eliminated the savings transfer fee entirely, making their linked-account protection genuinely free. Avoid linking a credit card as overdraft protection — the cash advance interest rate (often 25–29% APR, with no grace period) makes it one of the most expensive short-term borrowing options available.


How to Fix a Negative Balance

Acting quickly is always cheaper than waiting. Here’s the exact sequence to minimize damage once your account is already negative.

Step Action
1 Check your exact negative balance, including all pending fees
2 Deposit enough to cover the full negative amount plus all outstanding fees
3 Call your bank immediately and ask for a one-time overdraft fee courtesy reversal
4 Ask about enrolling in overdraft protection or low-balance alerts to prevent recurrence
5 Turn off debit/ATM overdraft opt-in if you’d rather have transactions declined than pay a fee

Getting Overdraft Fees Reversed

Banks reverse overdraft fees more often than most customers expect — particularly on the first occurrence and for customers with long account histories.

Factor Impact on Refund Likelihood
First overdraft ever Very likely to be reversed
Long-time customer Banks want to retain you
Polite, specific request Works better than demanding
Small original overdraft amount Banks have more discretion
Multiple overdrafts on same day May reverse one or two, not all
Frequent overdrafts Much less likely to get reversal

Call script: “Hi, I noticed an overdraft fee on my account from [date]. This isn’t typical for me — I’ve already deposited funds to cover the balance. Would you be able to waive the fee as a one-time courtesy?” This framing — specific, non-confrontational, and showing you’ve already fixed the underlying issue — gets fee reversals far more often than a general complaint. For a broader guide on reducing what you pay in bank fees of all types, see how to avoid bank fees.


How to Prevent Overdrafts

Prevention is always cheaper than recovery. These measures range from a five-minute one-time setup to a longer-term account switch.

Prevention Method Effort Effectiveness
Set up low-balance alerts 5 minutes High — you’ll know before it happens
Link savings for overdraft protection 5 minutes High — automatic coverage at low cost
Opt out of debit/ATM overdraft 5 minutes High — transactions decline instead of charging fee
Track auto-pay dates vs. payday 15 minutes Very high — prevents timing mismatches
Keep a $200–$500 buffer in checking Ongoing habit Very high — absorbs most fluctuations
Switch to a bank with no overdraft fees One-time switch Eliminates the problem entirely

Low-balance alerts cost nothing and take under five minutes to set up in any banking app. Setting an alert at $100 or $200 — rather than $0 — gives you a window to act before the account goes negative. For anyone who regularly carries a tight balance, switching to a bank that doesn’t charge overdraft fees is the single most effective long-term solution. The best free checking accounts and best online banks guides both highlight accounts from fee-free issuers worth considering. If you’re evaluating a full account switch, see best checking accounts for a full comparison of features and fee structures across major banks.


For more on managing your checking account and avoiding unnecessary fees, see how to avoid overdraft fees, the overdraft fees by bank comparison, and the monthly maintenance fees by bank guide.

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.

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