Cassidy Horton is a finance writer covering banking, life insurance and business loans. She has worked with top finance brands including NerdWallet, MarketWatch and Consumer Affairs. Cassidy first became interested in personal finance after paying of.
Cassidy Horton Personal Finance Reviewer and WriterCassidy Horton is a finance writer covering banking, life insurance and business loans. She has worked with top finance brands including NerdWallet, MarketWatch and Consumer Affairs. Cassidy first became interested in personal finance after paying of.
Written By Cassidy Horton Personal Finance Reviewer and WriterCassidy Horton is a finance writer covering banking, life insurance and business loans. She has worked with top finance brands including NerdWallet, MarketWatch and Consumer Affairs. Cassidy first became interested in personal finance after paying of.
Cassidy Horton Personal Finance Reviewer and WriterCassidy Horton is a finance writer covering banking, life insurance and business loans. She has worked with top finance brands including NerdWallet, MarketWatch and Consumer Affairs. Cassidy first became interested in personal finance after paying of.
Personal Finance Reviewer and Writer Elizabeth Aldrich Banking WriterWith eight years of experience as a financial journalist and editor and a degree in economics, Elizabeth Aldrich has worked on thousands of articles within the realm of banking, economics, credit cards, investing, loans, personal finance and travel.
Elizabeth Aldrich Banking WriterWith eight years of experience as a financial journalist and editor and a degree in economics, Elizabeth Aldrich has worked on thousands of articles within the realm of banking, economics, credit cards, investing, loans, personal finance and travel.
Elizabeth Aldrich Banking WriterWith eight years of experience as a financial journalist and editor and a degree in economics, Elizabeth Aldrich has worked on thousands of articles within the realm of banking, economics, credit cards, investing, loans, personal finance and travel.
Elizabeth Aldrich Banking WriterWith eight years of experience as a financial journalist and editor and a degree in economics, Elizabeth Aldrich has worked on thousands of articles within the realm of banking, economics, credit cards, investing, loans, personal finance and travel.
Updated: Aug 7, 2024, 3:03am
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You may now have more freedom to make withdrawals from your savings or money market account thanks to a pandemic-era rule change that the federal government has left intact.
Regulation D affects how banks and credit unions classify certain types of accounts. In April 2020, during the first wave of Covid-19 in the U.S., the Federal Reserve Board announced changes to Regulation D with the goal of making it easier for people to access their savings deposits without penalty, “at a time when financial events associated with the coronavirus pandemic have made such access more urgent.”
While some banks and credit unions responded by dropping their fees for excess withdrawals from savings accounts and MMAs, others have kept their pre-Covid-19 penalties in place. You may be able to access the money from your savings more easily now—or you may still face fees, depending on where you bank.
Regulation D is a federal rule regulating how banks and credit unions manage your savings deposits. Until April 24, 2020, the Federal Reserve’s regulation limited the number of withdrawals you could make from a “savings deposit” account, which included both savings accounts and money market accounts.
Regulation D had required savings accounts to be limited to a total of six “convenient transfers and withdrawals” per month. These included:
There were two major exceptions to Regulation D:
Regulation D required savers to be careful about how many transfers or withdrawals they made. If you went over the monthly limit, your bank could potentially charge you a fee per excess withdrawal, close your savings account or convert it to a checking account.
Banks and credit unions are required by federal law to keep a certain amount of cash on hand—also called reserve requirements—to make sure they can cover customer withdrawals.
Regulation D helped ensure banks had adequate reserves by limiting the number of withdrawals customers could make from savings and money market accounts each month. The rule never applied to checking accounts, which is why those always allowed unlimited withdrawals.
However, as part of the federal government’s financial response to the Covid-19 crisis, the Fed made changes to Regulation D so people could dip into their savings more frequently without penalty.
Under the revision to Regulation D announced in 2020, the Fed has loosened requirements for how banks treat savings deposits. Instead of limiting bank customers to six convenient transfers or withdrawals from a savings or money market account per month, Fed rules now allow for unlimited transfers or withdrawals. Individual banks and credit unions, however, may still have limits in place.
This six-per-month limit was deleted because the Fed determined reserves were sufficient to no longer warrant restrictions on the number of monthly withdrawals. The move also was part of the Fed’s stated strategy to assist consumers who were struggling financially as a result of the coronavirus pandemic and who could be helped by having more frequent access to their savings.
The change does not have a stated end date. According to the Fed’s savings deposits FAQs, “The Board does not have plans to re-impose transfer limits but may make adjustments to the definition of savings accounts in response to comments received on the Board’s interim final rule and, in the future, if conditions warrant.”
The rules change also has some other specifications for how banks and credit unions can manage and administer bank accounts and their financial reserve requirements, but most consumers have not seen any other significant changes to their accounts.
For example, your savings account will still be called a savings account, even if you make 10 convenient transactions per month from it. Your savings account also will still earn interest according to the bank’s usual procedures, even if you are making more transactions than usual from the account.
Unfortunately, Regulation D is still something you need to watch out for. Although it’s been suspended on a federal level, many banks still have the same withdrawal limits in place.
This means you could get charged an excessive withdrawal fee—or risk having your account closed—if you make more than six outgoing transactions a month.
For this reason, it’s important to review your savings account disclosure or call your bank to see what limits and fees may apply.