The Pennsylvania State Capitol Building, in downtown Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
A coalition of Pennsylvania’s leading financial associations pushed back against proposed legislation they said would hurt consumers by limiting access to overdraft protection services.
House Bill 1553, recently advanced by the state House Commerce Committee, aims to impose strict new requirements on overdraft programs. The Pennsylvania Bankers Association, the Pennsylvania Association of Community Bankers and the CrossState Credit Union Association jointly opposes the measure, arguing it would restrict consumer choice and drive users toward riskier alternatives.
Recommended For You
“Pennsylvania consumers deserve access to financial tools that help them manage life’s unexpected challenges — not legislation that will drive them toward riskier, unregulated alternatives,” the coalition said in a joint statement.
Overdraft protection, they emphasized, is an opt-in, voluntary service used by millions of residents to cover unforeseen expenses. The bill’s mandates, however, could make offering such services financially unfeasible for many institutions.
The groups also raised concerns about regulatory imbalance. Federally chartered institutions would be largely exempt from HB 1553 due to federal preemption, leaving state-chartered banks and credit unions to bear the costs. As a result, some institutions may consider switching to federal charters, weakening state oversight.
“This bill moves Pennsylvania in the wrong direction,” the coalition stated. “A better solution is greater financial literacy and consumer empowerment, not restricting safe and regulated services that help working families manage their finances.”
The coalition urged lawmakers to vote down HB 1553 and pursue policies that expand, not restrict, consumer financial options.
© Touchpoint Markets, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more inforrmation visit Asset & Logo Licensing.