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Governor Proposes to Enhance Protections Against Unfair Overdraft Fees

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As part of her recently unveiled 2025 State of the State, Governor Kathy Hochul on Wednesday announced the Department of Financial Services has posted proposed regulations to enhance consumer protections against unfair overdraft fees. According to the Governor, these proposed regulations ensure consumers will no longer be burdened with overdraft fees for minor transactions and require banks to provide timely notifications to consumers about overdraft fees to improve transparency.

“With hidden fees and unfair practices, it has become increasingly more difficult for hard-working New Yorkers to keep up,” Governor Hochul said. “It is time that we hold banks accountable and lighten the burden of high overdraft fees for minor transactions to keep New Yorkers’ hard-earned money in their pockets.”

The proposed regulations eliminate the most exploitative and deceptive banking fees, cap overdraft fees, strengthen customer communication establish stricter transaction processing requirements. State-chartered banks would be prohibited from:

  • Charging overdraft fees on overdrafts of less than $20.
  • Charging overdraft fees that exceed the overdrawn amount.
  • Charging more than three overdraft or non-sufficient funds (“NSF”) fees per consumer account per day.
  • Charging NSF fees for instantaneously declined electronic transactions.
  • Charging multiple NSF or overdraft fees for the same transaction, including when a merchant resubmits a declined transaction.
  • Charging a “sustained,” “continuous,” or “daily” fee for each day an overdraft balance is not repaid.
  • Charging double fees to cover an overdraft, such as one fee for automatically transferring funds from another account and a second fee for the overdraft itself.
  • Processing electronic debit transactions in a manner intended to maximize the number of overdraft and NSF fees.
  • Charging an overdraft fee for an electronic transaction when the consumer’s account indicates sufficient funds at the time the transaction was initiated.

New York State Department of Financial Services Superintendent Adrienne Harris said, “A healthy market grows when consumers have confidence and trust in the products offered and the providers offering them. Today’s proposed regulation ensures that consumers will no longer be taxed with surprising and disproportionate fees for using the overdraft services provided with their bank accounts.”

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