You probably opened your big bank account because there was a branch on campus, or because it happened to have the closest ATM to your first apartment. Years later, you’re still banking there — mostly just out of habit.
But staying out of habit shouldn't mean settling for a bank that doesn't work for you. Let’s look at five clear signs it might be time to make a clean break.
|
1 |
You’re paying more in fees than you’re earning in interest |
|
2 |
The app is a chore, not a tool |
|
3 |
No one knows your name |
|
4 |
Your money isn't working for your community |
|
5 |
You think switching is too hard (it's not) |
Take a close look at your last few statements. Count the charges: monthly maintenance fees, out-of-network ATM surcharges, minimum balance penalties, or overdraft fees that piled up before you even noticed.
According to a MoneyRates survey, the average monthly maintenance fee at large banks is $13.95. That's nearly $170 a year before a single overdraft or ATM charge hits.
Meanwhile, the interest rate on your savings account is essentially symbolic.
Credit unions are structured differently. As not-for-profit cooperatives, we don't answer to Wall Street shareholders. Instead, the earnings are redirected right back to our members in the form of better rates and fewer fees.
A mobile deposit that fails on the first try. An app that logs you out mid-transfer. A fraud dispute process that shuffles you through three different departments and still takes a week to resolve.
You shouldn’t have to sacrifice modern convenience to find a financial partner that works for you. Credit unions offer the same robust digital tools you expect anywhere — including seamless mobile banking, remote deposit, instant transfers, and digital wallet integration. You also get access to over 100,000 fee-free ATMs and 5,000 shared branch locations nationwide.
Best of all? If you ever run into technical trouble, you can easily reach a real, local human to help you solve it.
Imagine calling about a loan and realizing the rep hasn’t even looked at your account. Or trying to fix an error, only to repeat your story to three different people. Or worse, being pushed a product that doesn't fit your life because no one asked about your goals.
At a credit union, the people behind the counter have a genuine stake in getting things right because the members they serve are the actual owners of the institution.
That shifts the entire conversation from a corporate sales pitch to a neighborly partnership.
Big banks are for-profit corporations with shareholders, earnings targets, and quarterly reports that have nothing to do with your neighborhood. The way they invest your money has nothing to do with the communities it came from.
A not-for-profit credit union keeps your money close to home. Your deposits fund car and home loans for families right here in the Twin Cities. Plus, our earnings go right back into lower loan rates and better services for members.
If you want your money to make a local impact, where you bank matters.
This is the single most common reason people stay with a financial institution they've outgrown. Changing direct deposits, updating automatic payments, and moving savings accounts can feel like a grueling weekend chore you'll never get around to doing.
In reality, switching only takes a few hours spread over a couple of days. A good credit union makes the process seamless — helping you prioritize your deposits, time your payments so nothing bounces, and close your old account cleanly.
Honestly, the hardest part is just taking that first step.
If these signs hit close to home, it’s time to choose a financial partner that puts you first. City & County Credit Union has been serving the Twin Cities since 1928, working directly for the neighbors who bank here.
Our step-by-step Switch Guide makes the transition straightforward — showing you exactly what to move, when to time it, and how to start banking where you truly belong.