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You may be able to claim your £75 back as it is not at all clear whether these charges are legal. The Office of Fair Trading is in legal dispute with the banks over whether this falls within their jurisdiction. There have already been many successful cases of people getting large amounts of money back but I understand that claims are now frozen with the dispute with the OFT being in the courts. You may well be advised to put a claim in now to claim your place in the queue. See http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/reclaim/ for more info and free template letters.
dunrobin46
Yes they can and it isn't thieving. If you check the conditions that you agreed to when you opened the account you will see that they quite clearly state their charges,
If you don't agree with their charges you shouldn't have agreed to them when you opened your account.
.
Nickleback
Try this. They might be able to help.
http://www.moneysavingexpert.com/
Agnes B
After all the hype about bank charges I would suspect that they are within their rights to charge you.
However, if you dont usually go over your agreed overdraft limit and you give them a call, and explain that you think this is a bit unfair or that the excess was a genuine mistake I believe they may well reduce it or refund it.
Best of luck.
world and all its' contents
Yes this is right. The rules state that if you exceed your overdraft without any prior reference to the bank you are charged £75.
You will be wasting you time haggling with the bank, the rules are the rules and you should know that because your signature went on the piece of paper opening the account. It's a bit rich calling them thieves when what they have done, complies strictly with their rules.
You already had an overdraft which you exceeded without any prior reference to the bank. Why did'nt you go and see them to get your overdraft raised by £60? Time to take control of your money otherwise it gets expensive.
Fellside13
Read the terms & conditions of your account. If it says so in there then you're stuck!
DJJD
Perhaps it's not right. Yes you can complain. Have a look at the Financial Ombudsman's Service website below. It will give you the information you will need. If you don't trust the link just google 'Financial Ombudsman's Service.' Good luck.