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The $1,500 Frisbee

Posted May 04 2009, 07:03 AM by Karen Datko
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This post comes from J.D. Roth at partner blog Get Rich Slowly.

On the first day of college, I opened my first bank account.

The gym was filled with registration tables, not just for classes and clubs, but also for local businesses wanting to sell themselves to the students. There were even a couple of banks. Because I was getting a small payment from the school to cover living expenses, I needed to open a checking account.

The two banks had very different methods of attracting students. One displayed a sign that said "free checking." The other was handing out Frisbees. My choice was easy. I wanted the Frisbee. (Free checking? How boring.)

I signed up for my checking account, got my free Frisbee, and spent the afternoon on the quad, tossing the disc back and forth with my roommates. When it was time for dinner, I took the Frisbee up to my room, put it in the closet, and never used it again. But I had that checking account for nearly 17 years.

Classes started. I forgot about the Frisbee, and I forgot about the checking account. The next month, I received my first bank statement. There was a $5 service charge, but I didn't care. It was just $5, right? I accepted the fee as part of the package, and as part of being an adult. My parents had always paid service charges on their bank accounts, and I expected I always would, too.

I paid $5 a month to maintain my checking account throughout college. When I graduated, I continued to pay $5 a month. In the early 1990s, the fee increased to $8 a month. This bugged my wife (who had the same account), so she went into the bank and had them switch her to free checking. I didn't do anything.

In 1998, I cut up my credit cards and transferred the debt to a home-equity loan held at the same bank as my checking account. It occurred to me that maybe I could get the same free account that Kris had moved to a few years earlier. I asked. They said no, the only account available for me was the one I had. I accepted that answer and kept paying my $8 a month.

In fact, I paid a monthly fee for checking from September 1987 until June 2004. For 202 months -- nearly 17 years -- I paid $5 or $8 a month to have a checking account. In 2004, as part of my financial awakening, I closed my accounts at the bank and moved them to a local credit union. The credit union never charges me fees at all.

During the first episode of "The Personal Finance Hour," I mentioned this story. As I spoke, it occurred to me that the "free" Frisbee wasn't really free. Not even close. Roughing out the numbers, it's clear that this one poor choice alone cost me about $1,500 -- enough to buy hundreds of Frisbees.

Related reading at Get Rich Slowly:

How to turn $500 into $7 the hard way

27 money tips for college students

Making the most of your checking account

Comments

 

All of you who have never made a finacial mistake, stand up and be counted.

I am refering to the ones that made comments.

Lighten up on the guy. Geez... The guy was just telling his story of how his thought pattern worked when he was young. His story may even help someone out there to think twice before they jump into something stupid.

In the tough times that we're in right now some people are making a lot of decisions too quickly and they may pay dearly for these quick judgements.

This isn't about a $1500 frizbee. It's about making quick, poorly thought out decisions.

Ouch... I have done things like that. Paying thousands of dollars to "invest" when I was really just buying an insurance plan (lied to by my Drill Sergeants about the whole thing), lost over $100 to BoA for monthly fee's... just kept biting away and I did nothing... the list goes on and on.

I have made many mistakes but I have, hopefully, learned from them...

wow  i would of got the frisbe but so it is life

@ Buster: Where did 8% interest come from? Banks don't charge interest on your checking account...

As for those saying the writer of the article is a moron and you don't want to take financial advice from him, he's in the perfect situation to be advising you. He has experience. I'd rather take advice from someone with experience than someone without. But if you still don't want to take advice from him... then don't. That simple.

Kevins432 is absolutely right.

You must be a dumbo.

This article is quite funny, I know quite a few people who would have probably chose free frisbee over free checkings, it's just how young people are sometimes. I, thanks to my parents, opened my first account at NFCU when I was 15 years old and I have had nothing but good experiences with them, but still there are times when you are young and you fall for young things, I had signed up for a "free" subcription for TV guide when I was 16 and it was free for 3 months, and I NEVER looked at any of them, after that it cost me something like $3.00 a months, and I just kept paying it and recycling it for about 4 years, that's somewhere about $144 that I will never see again, I finally canceled when I got married.

I am 55 yrs old and have never paid a single bank fee of any kind - period.

He didn't say he didn't use the Account for 17 years- he didn't use the frisbe.  It does show how not dealing with a situation adds up.

Good decisions come from wisdom.

Wisdom comes from experience.

Experience comes from bad decision.

Caveat Emptor. No one makes you make bad decisions and quit blaming the banks. You have choices, use your head.

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