Bank of America settles 7-Eleven ATM fee lawsuit
FILE - Signage at a Bank of America branch in New York, US, on Wednesday, April 8, 2026. Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Bank of America has settled a class action lawsuit over ATM fees that were charged at certain machines inside a popular convenience store.
Here is what to know about the lawsuit and settlement:
Bank of America, 7-Eleven settlement
Big picture view:
A lawsuit was filed against Bank of America, alleging it charged two out-of-network fees for balance inquiry requests at certain ATMs located in 7-Eleven stores.
Bank of America has denied any wrongdoing.
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By the numbers:
Bank of America has reached a $2.25 million settlement in a class action lawsuit.
Who qualifies:
Both current and former Bank of America account holders who were given more than one out-of-network balance inquiry fee during the same visit to an FCTI-owner ATM inside a 7-Eleven store from May 1, 2018 to Nov. 26, 2021, are eligible.
Timeline:
Former account holders may be contacted and alerted of the settlement, and can file a claim by June 29, 2026, using this online claim form here.
Current account holders who are part of the settlement class don’t need to take action.
The final approval hearing for the settlement will be later this summer, on Aug. 21, 2026.
If approved, eligible customers will receive equal shares of the remainder of the settlement money.
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Of note:
Those who made a claim and received payment with the former and similar class action lawsuit settlement, Weiss v. FCTI, Inc., are not eligible.
The Source: Information in this article was taken from the class action settlement website for this case. This story was reported from Detroit.