NerdWallet's Smart Money Podcast - Money News: What’s the Deal With ‘Junk Fees’?
Episode Date: April 26, 2023You don’t have to be a Taylor Swift fan to feel like you’re being personally attacked by hidden fees and surcharges. These so-called junk fees can be unrelenting, but the tide may be changing. In ...this Money News episode, Sean talks with Anna Helhoski about the latest on junk fees and what you can do about them. To send the Nerds your money questions, call or text the Nerd hotline at 901-730-6373 or email podcast@nerdwallet.com. Like what you hear? Please leave us a review and tell a friend.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
You know what's been driving me up the wall lately, Anna?
What's that, Sean?
Fees.
Surcharges.
I know.
Why do I have to pay a service fee on top of a facility fee,
on top of a credit card fee, just to buy one concert ticket?
It's really maddening.
And I have a feeling that it's probably
something our listeners are pretty tired of, too.
Yep.
Welcome to the NerdWallet Smart Money Podcast, where you send us your money questions and
we answer them with the help of our genius nerds.
I'm Sean Piles.
And I'm Anna Helhosky.
If you have questions about how to avoid getting ripped off by fees or anything else money
related, really, leave us a voicemail or text us on the nerd hotline at 901-730-6373. That's 901-730-NERD.
Or you can email us at podcast at nerdwallet.com. So Ana and I are both pretty annoyed by pesky
fees. And listeners, I assume you probably are too. So let's get into it. Those fees actually have a name, right, Anna?
Yep, they're called junk fees.
They're the surcharges you pay on things like your credit cards, air travel, and hotel rooms.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has a pretty solid list of the types of fees that
probably sound familiar to listeners, like overdraft fees, late fees, convenience fees,
prepaid card fees, closing costs, and home buying
fees. The CFPB also points out fees associated with servicing auto loans, mortgage loans,
payday and title lending, as well as student loans. And you often see them at the back end
of transactions. So when booking a hotel room online, for example, it says this is the room
rate. And then when you're checking out, suddenly there's a quote-unquote resort fee on top of the room rate. Exactly. Resort fees usually cover
services and amenities above and beyond the room rate, but they're charged nightly, not for the
whole stay, so they can really add up. Yeah, and overdraft fees are another common junk fee too,
right? They are, and the CFPB says most of them cost between $30 and
$35. So if you overdraft by $5, you have this fee tacked on top of it and suddenly you're paying
$35 or $40. Yeah. There was a time in my life when money was really tight and I was all too familiar
with the sting of overdraft fees. They're particularly insidious because it can feel like
when you're low on cash, thisious because it can feel like when you're
low on cash, this big fee is just kicking you when you're down. Yeah, same here, Sean. Another one
I've heard about recently is fees when parents want to sit next to their kids on flights. That's
right. If you're booking tickets for your family and you and your child are separated, usually you
have to pay a fee in order to move seats so your child doesn't have to sit by
themselves. The Department of Transportation actually has this dashboard that lists the
carriers that do and don't offer fee-free seatings, and most do not. I want to talk a little more
about concert fees like you mentioned earlier. These have made many a headline in the past six
or so months, usually in the context of Ticketmaster shenanigans.
For the non-Swifties listening, Anna, can you give us a rundown of why this company
is nearly synonymous with junk fees at this point?
Ticketmaster basically has a monopoly on concert ticket sales.
Consumer advocates say Ticketmaster owns an estimated 70% of the live event ticket
brokering market. They have deals with venues
and artists that result in consumers having no other choice but to pay Ticketmaster's fees,
which let me tell you, will add up quick. Ticketmaster has also been in trouble for
not being upfront about how many tickets it has available for sale.
So back in November, demand for Taylor Swift tickets overwhelmed Ticketmaster.
The ticketing giant abruptly canceled its public sale of tickets for Swift's Heiress tour after prematurely outselling its inventory of tickets.
Swifties filed a class action lawsuit accusing Ticketmaster of fraud, misrepresentation and antitrust violations.
And it led to a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing where a lot of senators revealed they were Taylor Swift fans by using some really cringy song title puns and quips.
And more recently, Ticketmaster was in trouble with fans of The Cure, myself included, even after
the band tried to get ahead of exorbitant fees by saying it would offer affordable tickets for its
North American tour. I can tell you, Sean, as a really avid concert goer,
that the price would have been affordable to about $20 per ticket, which in this day and age
is pretty much unheard of. Yeah. I saw a Twitter user who said on top of that $20 ticket, she was
charged per ticket a service fee of $11.65 and a facility charge of $10. And in addition, there was a processing fee tacked onto the full order.
The total was $27 in fees on top of a $20 ticket.
It's so gross.
Gross, outrageous, all of those things.
But there's not a lot that people can do about it.
Well, not yet, at least.
Okay, but there is maybe some good news for us junk fee haters.
It looks like these charges are on the White House's radar and on Congress's, too.
President Biden called out junk fees in his State of the Union address earlier this year.
Junk fees may not matter to the very wealthy, but they matter to most other folks in homes like the one I grew up in, like many of you did.
They add up to hundreds of dollars a month. They make it harder for you to pay your bills or afford
that family trip. I know how unfair it feels when a company overcharges you and gets away with it.
Not anymore. On March 22nd, two senators, Richard Blumenthal and Sheldon Whitehouse,
introduced the Junk Fee Prevention Act. The same bill was
introduced in the House by Reps. Ruben Gallego and Jeff Jackson. But what would this bill actually do?
A few things, but I'll give you the key points. For hotels and ticketing service providers like
Ticketmaster, it would require the full price of services to be disclosed up front. It would also
bar excessive fees, and it would force ticket companies
to publicly disclose the total number of tickets available. For cable TV, internet, and mobile phone
companies, it would end early termination fees and require all mandatory fees to be disclosed.
And finally, it would require airlines to provide children 13 or younger a seat next to a family
member without having to pay a fee. So that all sounds like pretty welcome news to a lot of consumers out there.
But it's just a proposal right now, and Congress is pretty divided.
Are junk fees something that has bipartisan support?
Depends how you look at it.
So my murky answer is sort of.
A February 2023 poll by Morning Consult found support among Democrats, Republicans,
and independents, about three and four Americans, that support limiting junk fees. But that's public
support, which doesn't always correlate with support by their representatives. So the bill
was introduced by two Democrats and has the support of a president who is obviously also a Democrat.
There's been some pushback against banning certain junk fees in the past from Republican members of Congress. In September, Republican senators who sit on the
Senate Banking Committee sent a letter to the CFPB arguing against its efforts to curb overdraft fees,
saying that, quote, charging fees that customers chose to pay should not be disturbing or illegal.
And yet the CFPB appears to have developed a particular disdain for banks charging their
customers for services, pejoratively calling overdraft protection, quote, junk fees, end quote.
But then again, when it comes to Ticketmaster, there does seem to be bipartisan support,
or at least lots of annoyed music bands on both sides of the aisle.
Got it. So this new bill is out, but it's presumably going to take some time to move
through Congress, if it passes at all, before it's presumably going to take some time to move through Congress,
if it passes at all, before it lands on President Biden's desk.
What can people do for now?
Consumers should first try to do some comparison shopping.
Search for products or services that have lower or no fees.
But like we mentioned with concert ticket fees, it can be pretty unavoidable.
Sometimes you might just have to suck it up and pay the fees.
Otherwise, there's not much else to do except make a complaint to the relevant authorities.
Consumers can submit complaints about junk fees to the CFPB on their website at www.consumerfinance.gov slash complaint or by calling 855-411-2372. That's 855-411-CFPB. And then once you complain to the authorities,
maybe take to social media to commiserate with folks and potentially dabble in some
public shaming of the corporations that charge these fees. Yes, dabble away.
This episode was produced by Ana Helhosky and myself. We had editing help from Liz Weston.
Kaylee Monahan and I mixed our audio.
And a big thank you to the folks on the NerdWallet Copy Desk for all their help.
Here's our brief disclaimer.
We are not financial or investment advisors.
This nerdy info is provided for general educational and entertainment purposes
and may not apply to your specific circumstances.
And with that said, until next time, turn to the nerds!