You check your bank account and it's frozen — or worse, closed entirely. No warning, no explanation, just a letter saying the bank has "exercised its right to terminate the relationship." Then, to add insult to injury, the remaining balance takes weeks to arrive and any automatic payments start bouncing.
This happens more often than most people realize. Here's why banks close accounts, what rights you have, and how to fight back.
Why Banks Close Accounts
Banks can close accounts for several reasons, and they're often not required to tell you the specific one:
Common Reasons
- Suspicious activity flags — unusual transaction patterns, large cash deposits, or international transfers
- Regulatory compliance (BSA/AML) — Bank Secrecy Act and Anti-Money Laundering rules require banks to exit relationships they deem risky
- Unprofitable account — low balance, high activity, frequent overdrafts
- Too many returned payments — bounced checks or failed ACH transactions
- Identity verification failures — discrepancies in your identity documents
- Industry risk — some banks exit entire industries (cannabis, crypto, certain countries)
In Canada Specifically
Canadian banks are regulated under the Bank Act and must follow the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada (FCAC) guidelines, which provide some consumer protections around account closures.
Your Rights When a Bank Closes Your Account
In the US
| Right | Source | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Written notice | Bank policy (varies) | Most banks provide 30-60 days notice, but not all are legally required to |
| Return of funds | UCC and state law | The bank must return your remaining balance |
| Reason for closure | Limited | Banks are generally NOT required to give a specific reason (BSA/AML rules prevent disclosure in some cases) |
| Non-discrimination | Equal Credit Opportunity Act | Account closure cannot be based on race, religion, national origin, sex, or age |
| Regulatory complaint | CFPB, OCC | You can file complaints with federal regulators |
In Canada
| Right | Source | What It Means |
|---|---|---|
| Reasonable notice | FCAC guidelines | Banks should provide reasonable notice before closing |
| Return of funds | Bank Act | Remaining balance must be returned promptly |
| Internal complaint process | Bank Act | You have the right to use the bank's complaint process |
| OBSI escalation | OBSI mandate | You can escalate to the banking ombudsman |
| Access to basic banking | Access to Basic Banking Services Regulations | Banks cannot deny a basic account without specific cause |
Immediate Steps After Account Closure
Step 1: Secure Your Finances
Act fast to prevent cascading problems:
- List all automatic payments linked to the closed account (rent, utilities, subscriptions, loan payments)
- Open a new bank account at a different institution immediately
- Redirect direct deposits (payroll, benefits, Social Security)
- Update automatic payments to the new account
- Request remaining balance in writing from the closed bank
Step 2: Get It in Writing
Request formal written confirmation of:
- The account closure date
- The reason for closure (they may not provide specifics, but ask)
- The amount of remaining balance and when it will be returned
- Whether any holds or freezes apply to the remaining funds
Step 3: Check for Collections
If the closed account had a negative balance or outstanding fees:
- The bank may send the debt to a third-party collection agency
- Dispute any debt you don't owe immediately (in writing, within 30 days of the collection notice)
- Request debt validation from the collection agency
- Check your credit report for any related negative marks
How to Fight an Unjustified Account Closure
Level 1: Internal Complaint
Start with the bank's internal complaint process:
- Call customer service and ask for the complaints department
- Submit a written complaint explaining why the closure is unjustified
- Include any evidence supporting your case
- Request reinstatement or a clear explanation
Level 2: Regulatory Complaint
If the internal process fails:
In the US:
- CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau): consumerfinance.gov/complaint
- OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency): helpwithmybank.gov
- FDIC: for FDIC-insured banks
In Canada:
- FCAC (Financial Consumer Agency of Canada): canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency
- OBSI (Ombudsman for Banking Services and Investments): obsi.ca
- Provincial regulators: vary by province
Level 3: Legal Action
For significant financial damages:
- Consult a consumer protection attorney
- Small claims court for amounts under the threshold (varies by jurisdiction)
- Class action may be possible if the bank closed many accounts for similar reasons
Preventing Future Account Closures
- Maintain a reasonable balance — avoid keeping accounts at $0 for extended periods
- Avoid overdrafts — repeated overdrafts flag your account as risky
- Be transparent about your business — if you use a personal account for business activity, open a proper business account
- Keep your information current — outdated address or ID documents can trigger verification flags
- Avoid unusual transaction patterns — if you need to make large or unusual transactions, notify the bank proactively
The Bottom Line
When a bank closes your account without explanation, act quickly to protect your finances: open a new account, redirect payments and deposits, and request your remaining balance in writing. Then fight back through the bank's internal complaint process and regulatory channels (CFPB in the US, OBSI in Canada). Banks close accounts more often than people realize, and while they have broad discretion, regulatory complaints create accountability and often produce results. If you'd rather not manage weeks of calls and complaint letters yourself, an AI agent like Pine can file regulatory complaints, draft dispute letters, and follow up persistently until you get answers.
Sources
- CFPB Consumer Complaints: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/complaint/
- OBSI: https://www.obsi.ca/
- OCC Customer Assistance: https://www.helpwithmybank.gov/
- FCAC: https://www.canada.ca/en/financial-consumer-agency.html
Can a bank close your account without giving a reason?
In many cases, yes. In the US, banks generally have the right to close accounts at their discretion, and Bank Secrecy Act rules may actually prevent them from disclosing specific reasons related to suspicious activity investigations. In Canada, banks should provide reasonable notice under FCAC guidelines. In both countries, account closure cannot be based on discriminatory factors like race, religion, or national origin.
What should I do first when my bank closes my account?
Act immediately to prevent cascading financial problems. Open a new bank account at a different institution. List all automatic payments and direct deposits linked to the closed account and redirect them to the new account. Request your remaining balance in writing from the closed bank. Check for any collection notices and dispute them if unjustified. Then start the complaint process through the bank's internal channels.
Can I file a complaint if my bank closed my account unfairly?
Yes. Start with the bank's internal complaint process. If that fails, file a regulatory complaint. In the US, file with the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov or the OCC at helpwithmybank.gov. In Canada, file with the FCAC or escalate to OBSI, the banking ombudsman. Regulatory complaints create formal accountability and often produce responses that direct customer service channels cannot.






