What Is Overdraft Protection? How It Works and Do You Need It

Julia Kagan is a financial/consumer journalist and former senior editor, personal finance, of Investopedia.

Updated August 18, 2024 Reviewed by Reviewed by Somer Anderson

​Somer G. Anderson is CPA, doctor of accounting, and an accounting and finance professor who has been working in the accounting and finance industries for more than 20 years. Her expertise covers a wide range of accounting, corporate finance, taxes, lending, and personal finance areas.

Fact checked by Fact checked by Ariel Courage

Ariel Courage is an experienced editor, researcher, and former fact-checker. She has performed editing and fact-checking work for several leading finance publications, including The Motley Fool and Passport to Wall Street.

Part of the Series Guide to Checking Accounts

Types of Checking Accounts

  1. What Is a Checking Account? Here's Everything You Need To Know
  2. 6 Different Checking Accounts
  3. Joint Checking Account

Checking Account Basics

  1. Account Balance
  2. Non-Sufficient Funds
  3. Routing Transit Number
  4. Overdraft Protection
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Opening a Checking Account

  1. The Documents You Need
  2. Pros and Cons of Checking Accounts
  3. Checking Account Beneficiaries

Paying With Checks

  1. What is a Check?
  2. Bounced Check
  3. Do Checks Expire?
  4. How to Write a Check

Using a Debit Card

  1. Debit Cards
  2. Keeping Transactions Safe
  3. Prepaid Debit Card Precautions

Best Checking Accounts

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What Is Overdraft Protection?

Overdraft protection is an optional service that prevents charges to a bank account (primarily checks, ATM transactions, debit-card charges) from being rejected when they exceed the available funds in the account. Overdraft protection, sometimes called cash-reserve checking, is used most frequently as a cushion for checking accounts, but it also can be applied to savings accounts.

With overdraft protection, even if the account has insufficient funds, the bank will cover the shortfall so that the transaction goes through. When a customer signs up for overdraft protection, they designate a backup account for the bank to use as the source to cover any overdrafts—usually a linked savings account, credit card, or line of credit. However, the bank charges the customer for this service in a few ways, for example, through overdraft fees to process any transactions that overdraw the account.

Key Takeaways

How Overdraft Protection Works

Without overdraft protection, transactions that have insufficient funds to cover them are returned unpaid—that is, checks bounce and debit transactions are refused, which can be expensive and disruptive for the customer. Many banks charge overdraft and non-sufficient funds (NSF) fees (traditionally between $30 and $35, per transaction, on average, although several larger banks began reducing or eliminating the NSF fee as of late 2022) for accounts that don't have sufficient funds.

What's more, not only can the bank refuse payment and charge the account holder, but a penalty or fee may also be charged by the merchant for the failed transaction.

To avoid overdraft and NSF fees, customers who choose overdraft protection link their checking accounts to credit cards, savings accounts, or other lines of credit that kick in whenever they withdraw more than the current balance. This amounts to an automatic, pre-approved loan or transfer every time the customer with insufficient funds writes a check, makes a wire transfer, swipes a debit card, or asks an ATM for a sum in excess of the balance.

As soon as the overdraft protection service is triggered, the linked account is charged a transfer fee to move funds to cover the shortfall. The account holder may also be charged either an additional fee every month that overdraft protection is used or a fixed monthly fee for continuous protection.

If you bounce a check, you can incur a variety of charges or, in extreme cases, your bank can close your account, which also affects your ability to open a new checking account.

Example of Overdraft Protection

If a renter with overdraft protection writes an $800 check on an account with a balance of $650, the overdraft protection from their linked account kicks in as soon as the check is cashed—and the check clears instead of bouncing due to insufficient funds.

The bank may charge a transfer fee of $15 for approving a transaction that exceeds available funds. The renter will now have a balance of $635 ($650 - $15) in the account as well as a charge of $800 to pay off on the linked credit card, line of credit, or savings account.

Special Considerations

Lines of credit for overdraft protection can range from $500 to $7,500 and above—and, of course, customers incur interest charges and transaction fees for using these lines.

Multiple Overdraft or NSF Fees

In the absence of overdraft protection, it isn't uncommon for banks to charge multiple overdraft or NSF fees per day. For example, a consumer might make successive purchases without realizing that the amount in their account is insufficient to cover the charges. If a checking account goes negative for more than a few days, many banks also charge an extended overdraft fee. It’s important to note that—even if you have overdraft protection—banks can still charge this additional fee.

If a credit card is used as the backup account, the amount is treated as a cash advance—which can be an expensive form of overdraft protection. Not only do cash advances have no grace period, but they also have high interest rates and high fees (usually $10 flat fees or 5% of the advance, whichever is greater).

A linked savings account is probably the least expensive backup account for overdraft protection, but the backup account must hold enough money to cover the shortfall in the first account.

Trends in Overdraft Protection

Overdraft fees have always been among the most controversial bank fees. According to a 2023 Bankrate.com survey of 10 banks and thrifts in each of 25 large U.S. markets, the average overdraft fee declined 11% to $26.61, down from $29.80 the year before. In the wake of the 2020 pandemic, public debate accelerated a trend toward eliminating overdraft fees altogether. For example, the U.S. Senate held hearings on how and why banks charge fees for insufficient funds and criticized bank chief executives for refusing to halt overdraft fees during the pandemic.

More evidence of this trend includes a 2022 American Banker report that—as big banks made headlines for reducing or eliminating overdraft fees—even credit unions felt pressure from regulators and digital bank competitors to do the same.

Is There a Limit on Overdraft Fees?

Federal laws don't specify maximums that banks can charge for overdrafts, but banks are required to disclose any fees when the account is established—and they are required to give customers advance notice of any fee increase.

Can Banks Refuse to Cover Overdrafts?

Banks aren't required to offer overdraft protection, and—even when they do and a customer opts in—banks retain the right to pay or not pay a particular overdraft transaction that might fall outside the rules of the agreement.

Is Overdraft Protection Mandatory?

Overdraft protection is optional; it is only automatic for bank customers who choose to opt in for overdraft protection on their checking or savings accounts.

The Bottom Line

Overdraft protection is an optional service that stops charges to a bank account, usually checking, ATM transactions, or debit-card charges, from being rejected when they exceed the available funds in an account. Overdraft protection—at times called cash-reserve checking—is used most often as a cushion for checking accounts, but it also can be applied to savings accounts.

When a customer signs up for overdraft protection, they designate a backup account for the bank to use as the source to cover any overdrafts—usually a linked savings account, credit card, or line of credit. But the bank can charge the customer for this, through overdraft fees to process any transactions that overdraw the account.