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Key takeaways
- The Federal Reserve eliminated the six-withdrawal limit on savings accounts in April 2020, giving consumers unlimited access to their money — at least on paper.
- Here’s the catch: Many banks still restrict withdrawals to six per month even though they’re no longer required to by federal law.
- Banks that maintain limits typically charge $5-15 per excess withdrawal and may convert your account to checking if you repeatedly exceed the limit.
- If you need frequent access to your savings, switch to a bank that eliminated withdrawal limits entirely or use a high-yield checking account for transactions.
Regulation D used to limit savings account withdrawals to six per month. The Federal Reserve scrapped that rule in April 2020. But many banks pretended nothing changed and still enforce the old six-withdrawal limit — because they can.
Here’s what you need to know and how to avoid getting hit with unnecessary fees.
What is Regulation D?
Regulation D was a Federal Reserve rule that required banks to maintain reserves against certain types of deposits and limited “convenient” withdrawals from savings accounts to six per statement cycle.
The rule distinguished between two types of accounts:
- Transaction accounts (checking): Designed for unlimited daily transactions like paying bills, writing checks and making purchases.
- Savings deposits (savings and money market accounts): Intended for accumulating money, with limits on how often you could move money out electronically.
The six-withdrawal cap applied specifically to “convenient” transactions — things like online transfers, bill pay, automatic payments and debit card purchases. In-person withdrawals and ATM transactions were always unlimited.
Why the limit existed: The Federal Reserve used reserve requirements to control monetary policy. By limiting withdrawals on savings accounts, regulators helped banks predict how much cash they’d need on hand.
Why the limit existed
The Federal Reserve used reserve requirements to control monetary policy. By limiting withdrawals on savings accounts, regulators helped banks predict how much cash they’d need on hand.
The 2020 rule change: What actually happened
In April 2020, as the pandemic hit, the Fed reduced bank reserve requirements to zero and deleted the six-transaction limit from the regulatory definition of savings accounts. The goal was to give Americans more financial flexibility during economic uncertainty.
What changed:
- Banks are no longer federally required to limit withdrawals
- The regulatory distinction between savings and checking accounts blurred
- Consumers theoretically gained unlimited access to savings
What didn’t change:
- Banks can still impose their own withdrawal limits if they want
- Many banks kept the six-withdrawal restriction in place
- Excess withdrawal fees remain common
Which transactions count toward withdrawal limits?
If your bank maintains withdrawal restrictions, these transactions typically count toward your monthly limit:
Limited transactions (count toward six):
- Electronic transfers such as online bill pay, automatic transfers between accounts and transfers via mobile banking apps.
- Outgoing wire transfers from your savings account to other banks or individuals.
- Debit card purchases on money market accounts (savings accounts rarely offer debit cards).
- Automated payments set up through your bank’s bill pay service or third-party services like Zelle.
- Overdraft protection transfers from your savings account to cover checking account overdrafts.
Transactions that typically don’t count toward limits:
ATM withdrawals and in-person transactions with bank tellers are generally exempt from Reg. D restrictions, even at banks that maintain withdrawal limits. This means you can still access your money when needed, though you may need to visit an ATM or branch.
Unlimited transactions (don’t count):
Even banks that maintain withdrawal limits typically provide several ways to access your money without penalties.
- ATM withdrawals remain unlimited at most institutions. You can withdraw cash at ATMs or visit a branch to speak with a teller without affecting your transaction count.
- Direct deposits and incoming transfers don’t count toward withdrawal limits since they add money to your account rather than removing it.
- Interest payments and other bank-initiated transactions are excluded from customer transaction limits.
- Account-to-account transfers within the same bank may be treated differently depending on the institution’s policies, so check with your specific bank.
Do banks still limit withdrawals?
Yes—many do, even though they don’t have to.
Many online banks and credit unions have eliminated limits entirely. This includes Ally Bank, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, American Express National Bank, Capital One 360, and more.
Check out the best online banks.
Banks that still enforce the six-withdrawal limit are most traditional brick-and-mortar banks, including Wells Fargo, Bank of America and Chase. What happens if you exceed the limit:
- Excess transaction fees: $5-15 per transaction over the limit
- Account conversion: Your savings account may be converted to checking (often with lower interest rates)
- Account closure: Repeated violations can result in account closure
Check your bank’s specific policy — it should be disclosed in your account agreement or on their website.
Should you care about Regulation D in 2025?
Honestly? Only if your bank still enforces withdrawal limits.
1. Know your bank’s policy
Don’t assume anything. Log into your account or call customer service to confirm:
- How many withdrawals are you allowed per month?
- What’s the fee for excess withdrawals?
- Which transaction types count toward the limit?
2. Choose the right account for your needs
The best account setup depends on how you use your money:
- If you rarely touch your savings: Any high-yield savings account works, even with withdrawal limits. You’re earning up to 4.20% APY on your emergency fund and barely accessing it.
- If you need frequent access: Switch to a bank with unlimited withdrawals or use a high-yield checking account for money you touch regularly.
- If you pay bills from savings: Stop. Move bill-paying money to checking where it belongs. Use automatic transfers to move your monthly expenses from savings to checking once per month.
3. Avoid unnecessary fees
Excess withdrawal fees are completely avoidable. Structure your finances so you’re not constantly dipping into savings:
- Keep 1-2 months of expenses in checking
- Use savings for true emergencies and financial goals
- Schedule one monthly transfer from savings to checking rather than multiple small transfers
The bottom line
Regulation D’s withdrawal limits officially ended in April 2020, but many banks act like nothing changed. Some still cap withdrawals at six per month and charge fees if you exceed that limit — simply because they can, not because they have to.
Don’t accept withdrawal limits as inevitable. Plenty of banks eliminated these restrictions years ago and offer better rates to boot. If your bank is nickel-and-diming you with excess withdrawal fees, it’s time to switch.
If you’re paying excess withdrawal fees, you’re leaving money on the table. Online banks with unlimited withdrawals and 4.20% APY exist. Use them.
FAQs about Regulation D
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