Simple Steps to Keep More of Your Money
Want to know how to avoid hidden comissions? Many products look cheap at first, but small fees add up. Use these simple checks to spot and stop them.
Hidden commissions (often called hidden fees) are charges that are not clear up front. They may appear as service fees, processing fees, spreads, exchange mark-ups, or management fees. In investing, they can show as an expense ratio or advisory fee. In banking, they can be account maintenance or overdraft fees.
Where Hidden Fees Usually Hide
- Bank accounts: Monthly maintenance, overdraft, out-of-network ATM, wire transfer, or early closure fees.
- Credit cards: Annual fees, cash advance fees, late fees, and foreign transaction fees.
- Investing: Brokerage fees, trading spreads, fund expense ratios, management or platform fees, and inactivity fees.
- Loans: Origination fees, documentation fees, and prepayment penalties.
- Travel and payments: Currency exchange mark-ups and dynamic currency conversion at checkout.
- Subscriptions: Trial-to-paid auto-renewals and add-on service fees.
Simple Steps to Avoid Them
- Check the fee page first: Look for a link called “Fees,” “Pricing,” or “Terms and conditions.” If it is hard to find, take that as a warning sign.
- Search the fine print: Use your browser’s Find tool for words like “fee,” “charge,” “commission,” “maintenance,” “foreign,” and “penalty.”
- Ask five key questions:
- What is the total cost per month or per year?
- When do extra fees apply?
- Can these fees be waived? How?
- What happens if I cancel or pay early?
- How will this appear on my statement?
- Compare apples to apples: When choosing accounts or funds, compare the same features and list each known fee side by side.
- Prefer simple pricing: Choose no-fee or flat-fee options when possible. In funds, lower expense ratios often mean lower ongoing costs.
- Turn off extras: Decline add-ons you do not need, like insurance you did not ask for or premium support tiers.
- Use alerts: Set balance and spending alerts to avoid overdrafts and late fees.
- Review statements monthly: Scan for new or changed fees. If you see one, call and ask for a waiver or switch providers.
Quick Examples
- Checking account: Choosing a no-monthly-fee account helps you avoid maintenance charges. Keep direct deposit if it is required to waive fees.
- Credit card abroad: Use a card with no foreign transaction fees. Decline dynamic currency conversion and pay in the local currency.
- Investing: If two similar index funds track the same market, the one with the lower expense ratio usually costs you less over time.
- Loans: Ask about origination fees and prepayment penalties before applying. Get the total cost in writing.
Keep More of Your Money
Hidden commissions thrive in fine print and confusing pricing. Slow down, ask clear questions, and compare total costs. A few minutes of checking can save you from surprise fees.