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Limits on Savings Withdrawals Have Been Lifted

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Limits on Savings Withdrawals Have Been Lifted
The Citigroup Inc (Citi) logo is seen at the SIBOS banking and financial conference, in Toronto, Canada, on Oct. 19, 2017. Chris Helgren/Reuters
Wire Service
4/24/2020|Updated: 4/24/2020

Banks can now allow savings account holders to make an unlimited number of transfers or withdrawals, the Federal Reserve Board announced Friday.

The Fed removed the previous limit of six transfers or withdrawals per month to allow people greater access to their savings during this time of economic uncertainty and widespread unemployment.

The Fed said financial events associated with the CCP virus pandemic had made access to savings accounts more urgent. There is also an increased need for people to be able to access their money remotely since bank branches and other in-person options have been shut down.

Additionally, the Fed said, banks no longer need to keep a regulatory distinction between checking accounts and savings accounts. However, banks are free to determine their procedure.

The change also does not prohibit banks from charging their customers fees for transfers or withdrawals beyond the six transfer limit.

A Chase bank branch on Madison Avenue in Midtown New York, on Jan. 8, 2016. (Ingrid Longauer/Epoch Times)
A Chase bank branch on Madison Avenue in Midtown New York, on Jan. 8, 2016. Ingrid Longauer/Epoch Times

But having quick access to your cash comes with downsides, said Greg McBride, a chief financial analyst for Bankrate.com.

“Making it easier for people to get money out of their savings account during difficult and challenging financial circumstances is beneficial,” he said. “But I worry about the unintended consequences.”

As savings accounts become more like checking accounts, the interest rates will look more like checking accounts, he said.

“The average checking account pays about one-third of what a money-market deposit account pays,” he said.

Account-holders will need to check with their institutions to determine how this interim rule will be implemented. Still, greater access could provide more flexibility to people working to cover their expenses.

“If you’re experiencing a hardship right now and you have the savings, that should be your first stop,” said McBride. “If it is easier to get your savings now and it keeps your hands off retirement accounts, that is great.”

But for many people the problem with using their savings now isn’t that they don’t have access, he said, it is that they don’t have any savings or it is already exhausted.

The CNN Wire and Epoch Times staff contributes to this report

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