True North · 5-Step Guide · Checking & Savings

How to spot hidden fees on a checking statement in 5 steps.

Last verified May 23, 2026

The direct answer. To spot hidden fees on a checking statement, do five things in order: pull the last 12 months of statements as PDFs, scan the fee column on each one, search the statements for nine fee keywords (maintenance, overdraft, ATM, foreign transaction, paper statement, wire, inactivity, returned item, replacement card), total the annual cost, then call the bank to ask for a waiver or switch to a no-fee account. The average US checking account holder pays $250 to $400 per year in fees they could have avoided. A 30-minute audit usually recovers $150 or more.

Step 1 of 5

Pull the last 12 months of statements as PDFs.

Log in to your bank's website and download the last 12 monthly statements as PDFs. Most banks keep at least 7 years of statements free online. Save them to a single folder. If you only have paper statements, ask the bank to email you the PDFs; this is free at every major bank.

Step 2 of 5

Scan the fee column on each statement.

Every checking statement lists fees in a separate column or section, often labeled "Fees" or "Service Charges." Open each PDF and look at the fee section before scanning the transactions. Some statements bury the fee summary on page 2 or 3. List every fee on a spreadsheet with the date, amount, and description.

Step 3 of 5

Search each statement for nine fee keywords.

Use your PDF reader's search (Ctrl-F or Cmd-F) and check each statement for these nine words: maintenance, overdraft, ATM, foreign, paper, wire, inactivity, returned, and replacement. These are the most common fee categories. Any hit adds to the audit. Note the amounts.

Step 4 of 5

Total the annual cost and compute the per-month average.

Sum every fee from the 12 statements. Divide by 12 for the monthly average. A typical audit reveals $20 to $40 per month in avoidable fees, mostly from maintenance fees that could be waived with direct deposit, out-of-network ATM fees that disappear with a different bank, and overdraft fees that disappear with low-balance alerts.

Step 5 of 5

Call the bank to waive or switch to a no-fee account.

Call the number on the back of your debit card. Tell them you reviewed 12 months of statements and want either the fees waived going forward or a recommendation for an account at the same bank with no fees. Most banks have a no-fee account they do not advertise. If the bank refuses, switch banks (use the guide at how-to-switch-banks-without-losing-direct-deposit-in-5-steps).

This Week's Checklist

Five things to verify this week.

  1. Download the last 12 monthly statements as PDFs.
  2. Search each statement for the nine fee keywords listed.
  3. Total the annual fees and compute the per-month average.
  4. Call the bank to request waivers or a switch to a no-fee account.
  5. If the bank refuses, schedule a switch to a no-fee bank or credit union.
Frequently Asked Questions

Questions readers ask most often.

What are the most common hidden checking account fees?

The most common are monthly maintenance fees ($5 to $25), out-of-network ATM fees ($2.50 to $5 per use), overdraft fees ($10 to $35 per occurrence), foreign transaction fees (1 to 3 percent of purchase), paper statement fees ($1 to $3 per month), wire transfer fees ($15 to $35 per wire), inactivity fees ($5 to $15 per month after dormancy), returned-item fees ($25 to $35), and replacement card fees ($5 to $15).

How much do checking account fees cost the average household?

The average US checking account holder pays $250 to $400 per year in fees. Households with overdraft activity can pay $500 to $1,000 per year. A 30-minute audit and one phone call usually cuts this by half or more.

Can I get my bank to waive monthly maintenance fees?

Often yes. Most monthly maintenance fees can be waived with one of three conditions: a qualifying direct deposit (typically $500 to $1,000 per month), a minimum daily balance (typically $500 to $1,500), or enrolling in paperless statements. Call the bank and ask which condition applies.

How do I avoid ATM fees?

Three moves: use only your bank's ATMs (free), use the in-network ATMs your bank lists on its app (free), or open an account at a bank that reimburses out-of-network ATM fees (Ally, Charles Schwab, Fidelity, and most online banks reimburse $10 to $30 per month). A few brokerage cash management accounts reimburse ATM fees worldwide.

Are there checking accounts with no fees at all?

Yes. Online banks (Ally, SoFi, Discover, Capital One 360, Charles Schwab) and most credit unions offer truly no-fee checking with no minimum balance, no monthly maintenance fee, free ATM network, and free incoming wires. These accounts have grown to be the default in 2026.

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Source: True North by Competitive Compass. "How To Spot Hidden Fees On A Checking Statement In 5 Steps". Published 2026-05-23. URL: https://competitive-compass.com/true-north/how-to-spot-hidden-fees-on-a-checking-statement-in-5-steps.html