She was always overdrafting her accounts to the point where my dad actually had to go pay Bank of America $200 to close one of them for her, so she decided 'fuck banks' and would just spend her entire paycheck at Target. Whenever she needed cash she would head to Target and return some stuff.
It's interesting how he somehow manages to have money when he "banks" one way, but constantly overdrafts when he "banks" another way. It honestly sounds like he has difficulty with money management when the money's in an abstract form, such as a checking account. Having physical cash on hand is a lot easier to keep track of.
I, too, have dealt with that problem. But my solution was to carry a limited amount of cash on me and leave my debit card at home. I mean, I'm glad he found a method that works for him. I'm just concerned he'll be SoL when the transition to digital-only games renders physical GameStops obsolete.
Wait so he has to pull his money out if the game comes out and he actually gets charged for it? If he waits too late then he has to buy it and gamestop gets a cut if he returns it.
So OP is actually a genius. Except if you put money in a bank, it grows some money. Also it's insured, I wonder how stringent the protections are if GameStop was to go bankrupt and take the money with them.
Wouldn't it be more clevererer to go straight from video games to chickens? Like, go to your steam account and get refunded in nuggies hand-delivered by Gabe? Why no one thinks of this, it's like I'm surrounded by retards
No, there's a US law now where they have to allow you to opt out of overdraft "protection". They just decline the transaction but don't charge you any fees.
If only they didn't charge fees. My bank charges an insufficient funds fee that's conveniently the same amount as the overdraft protection fee. So my options are eat the fee and get my stuff, or eat the fee and not get my stuff.
I'm not entirely sure this is legal, but I was told directly by a representative that these were my options. It's quite literally a poor tax.
In fact, overdraft protection is typically opt-in, so just don't sign up for it and you're golden.
The only overdraft I use is self-funded overdraft where it pulls from savings instead of a tiny bank loan. I have it send me a notification when that happens so I can tell when my cash flow is wonky.
Some banks allow you to choose- If you overdraft, do you want us to pay the vendor, and then hit you with a overdraft fee? Or do you want us to reject the charge?
Yeah. I’m in the latter group. I’ve got my secret gas cash, but if I run out of money I get rejected. It hasn’t happened since college, but I keep it in case
They mean opting out of overdraft protection. Banks typically allow you overdraft protection, where instead of denying your sale at point of sale, they'll pay it, charge you a fee, and let the transaction go through.
If you opt out of overdraft protection, it should instead deny the sale, and you don't get to buy whatever. At my bank, they do this and then charge an insufficient funds fee, which is the same as the overdraft fee. It's bullshit.