High costs of using any ATM return

Banks won’t absorb withdrawal fees

04 June 2020 - 14:15
By Money Reporter
If you draw at another bank's ATM you will now again pay the usual withdrawal fees as well as a punitive Saswitch fee. Picture: 123RF/MILKOS
If you draw at another bank's ATM you will now again pay the usual withdrawal fees as well as a punitive Saswitch fee. Picture: 123RF/MILKOS

Beware, if you have been using any ATM to draw cash over the past two months – now that people are returning to work, the banks have reintroduced high charges for failing to use your own bank’s ATM to withdraw money.

If you draw from another bank’s ATM, you will now again incur fees of up to R21.50 per R500 withdrawal. 

South African banks agreed to waive ATM cash withdrawal and Saswitch network charges during the lockdown given the restrictions on travel during the coronavirus lockdown. But now that the lockdown has eased to level three, the banks will no longer absorb these costs, the Banking Association South Africa said in a recent statement.

Normally, if, for example, you bank with Nedbank and make a cash withdrawal from say an FNB ATM, you would pay the usual withdrawal fees as well as a punitive Saswitch fee for using another bank’s ATM. 

These fees were waived for the past two months, but they are back again. 

Remember that some of the cheapest withdrawal fees are if you withdraw money from inside a store like Pick n Pay or Checkers at the till or point of sale. 

Capitec, for example, charges R8 for every R1000 or less that you withdraw at a Capitec ATM, but withdrawing cash from your account at a Pick n Pay, Shoprite, Checkers or Boxer till-points will only cost you R1.20.

TymeBank lets you withdraw from free at Pick n Pay but charges R8 if you use another bank’s ATM.

FNB let’s you withdraw up to R2000 from an Easy account at is own ATMs free, but thereafter you will pay either R2.00 per 100 or R8 per R100 depending on your package. All withdrawals from certain retailers are, however, free.

The Banking Association says the banks are continuing to help consumers who are struggling to repay their loans, but it now needs to “recover the cost of maintaining and operating ATMs and point-of-sale networks.