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How to Get Overdraft Fees Waived: Phone Scripts and Strategies for Every Bank

Get overdraft fees reversed with proven phone scripts. Bank-specific strategies for Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and credit unions.

Last edited on May 26, 2026
7 min read
Blog cover for overdraft-fee

Americans pay over $8 billion annually in overdraft and NSF fees — typically $35 per transaction, often for purchases under $10. A single forgotten bill can trigger a cascade of fees totaling $100-$200+ before you even realize your balance went negative.

The good news: banks waive overdraft fees far more often than people think. A polite phone call succeeds 80%+ of the time for first-time requests, and even repeat requests have decent success rates. Here's exactly what to say.

Universal Phone Script (Works at Any Bank)

Step 1: Call the number on the back of your debit card

Step 2: When connected to a representative, say:

"Hi, I noticed an overdraft fee of $[amount] on my account from [date]. I understand this was due to [brief acknowledgment — e.g., 'a timing issue with my direct deposit' or 'miscalculating my balance']. I've been a customer for [X years] and this isn't typical for my account. Is there any way you could reverse this fee as a one-time courtesy?"

If they say yes: Thank them and confirm the credit will appear.

If they say no, try:

"I understand. Is there a supervisor available who might have more flexibility? I really value my relationship with [bank name] and would appreciate any consideration."

If supervisor also says no:

"I appreciate you looking into it. Could you note on my account that I requested a waiver? I'd also like to know — how can I set up alerts to prevent this from happening again?"

Bank-Specific Strategies

Chase

  • Fee: $34 per item (max 3 per day = $102 max daily)
  • Policy: Chase has reduced fees and offers a 1-business-day grace period to deposit funds
  • Best approach: Call or use the Chase app to request a fee reversal
  • Success rate: High for first-time requests; Chase customer service generally has authority to reverse 1-2 per year
  • Tip: Mention you're considering switching to a fee-free bank

Bank of America

  • Fee: $35 per item (max 2 per day = $70 max daily)
  • Policy: $50 overdraft cushion (no fee if overdrawn by less than $50); eliminated NSF fees in 2022
  • Best approach: Call or visit a branch; mention your total relationship (credit cards, mortgage, investments)
  • Tip: BofA's Preferred Rewards customers get better treatment — mention your tier

Wells Fargo

  • Fee: $35 per item; 24-hour grace period to cover the overdraft
  • Policy: Clear Access Banking account has no overdraft fees; standard accounts charge per-item
  • Best approach: Call or use online chat; note the 24-hour grace period — if you deposited within 24 hours, argue the fee shouldn't apply
  • Tip: Ask about switching to Clear Access Banking if overdrafts are frequent

PNC

  • Fee: $36 per item
  • Policy: Low Cash Mode gives extra time before fees hit; Virtual Wallet accounts have different rules
  • Best approach: Request reversal through the app or by calling

U.S. Bank

  • Fee: $36 per item
  • Policy: Eliminated NSF fees; overdraft fees reduced
  • Best approach: Call and mention account tenure

Credit Unions (General)

  • Fees: Typically $25-30 (lower than big banks)
  • Success rate: Very high — credit unions are more member-focused
  • Best approach: Call or visit; credit unions waive fees more readily and frequently

Banks With No Overdraft Fees

Consider switching if overdrafts are a recurring problem:

Bank Overdraft Fee Alternative
Capital One $0 Auto-declines or covers small overages
Ally Bank $0 $100 overdraft cushion, no fee
Discover $0 Auto-declines debit purchases
Citibank $0 Eliminated overdraft fees entirely
Alliant Credit Union $0 Courtesy coverage at no charge
Chime $0 SpotMe covers up to $200
SoFi $0 Up to $50 overdraft coverage free

Prevention Strategies

1. Set Up Low Balance Alerts

  • Set alerts at $100, $50, and $25 thresholds
  • Get push notifications before you overdraft
  • Available in all major banking apps
  • Most banks allow auto-transfer from savings to checking when balance is low
  • Transfer fee (if any) is typically $5-10 — much less than a $35 overdraft fee

3. Opt Out of Overdraft Coverage

  • Under Regulation E, you can opt out for debit card and ATM transactions
  • Transactions will simply be declined — no fee
  • Checks and ACH may still overdraft, but daily spending won't

4. Use a Buffer Strategy

  • Keep a $200-500 mental "zero" in your checking
  • Don't spend below this buffer
  • Treat it as invisible money

5. Align Bill Due Dates With Payday

  • Call billers and request due date changes to align with your pay schedule
  • Reduces the chance of bills hitting before your deposit clears

If You're Charged Multiple Fees at Once

When one overdraft triggers a cascade:

"I understand that [X] fees were charged on [date]. These all resulted from a single timing issue — my deposit posted one day late and triggered all of these. I'm asking for a reversal of the full $[total] since this was one event, not [X] separate incidents. Can we work something out?"

Banks often reverse all fees from a single incident even if they won't routinely waive multiple fees.

Quick Checklist

  • [ ] Called bank within 1-2 days of the fee posting
  • [ ] Used polite, non-demanding language
  • [ ] Acknowledged the overdraft without making excuses
  • [ ] Mentioned tenure as a customer
  • [ ] Asked for supervisor if first rep said no
  • [ ] Set up low-balance alerts to prevent future overdrafts
  • [ ] Considered opting out of overdraft coverage for debit transactions
  • [ ] Evaluated switching to a no-fee bank if overdrafts are frequent

Bottom Line

Never pay an overdraft fee without at least attempting to get it waived. An 80%+ success rate for first-time requests means the 5-minute phone call is almost always worth it. If overdrafts happen regularly, the better solution is prevention — alerts, opt-out, or switching to a fee-free bank entirely. The banking industry is moving away from overdraft fees under regulatory pressure, and consumers have more fee-free options than ever.

How would Pine help me get overdraft fees waived?

Sources

  • CFPB Overdraft Fee Report: https://www.consumerfinance.gov/data-research/research-reports/data-point-overdraft-nsf/
  • Federal Reserve Regulation E: https://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/regecg.htm

Frequently Asked Questions

How often will banks waive overdraft fees?icon-hide

Most banks will waive 1-2 overdraft fees per year for customers in good standing. Some banks (especially credit unions) waive more frequently. First-time requests have an 80%+ success rate. Repeat requests within the same year have lower success but are still worth attempting — the worst they can say is no.

Call the bank, be polite, acknowledge the overdraft was your mistake, mention your history as a customer, and directly ask for a courtesy reversal. If the first representative says no, ask to speak with a supervisor. Many banks also have overdraft fee reversal options in their mobile apps.

Several banks have reduced or eliminated overdraft fees as of 2025: Capital One (eliminated all overdraft fees), Ally Bank (eliminated overdraft fees), Alliant Credit Union (no overdraft fees), Discover (eliminated overdraft fees), and Citibank (eliminated overdraft fees on consumer accounts). Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo still charge but have reduced fees.

Yes. Under Regulation E, banks must get your opt-in consent before charging overdraft fees on debit card and ATM transactions. You can opt out at any time, which means these transactions will simply be declined rather than overdrafted. However, checks and recurring ACH payments may still overdraft even if you opt out.

Lisa Wei

Lisa Wei

Content Strategist

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