Bankings

What Happens If You Go Over Your Overdraft UK — Fees and Consequences

Consequences of exceeding your overdraft limit. Charges, credit impact, and what to do if you can't stay within your arranged overdraft.

Going over your overdraft triggers various consequences. Here’s what actually happens and what to do about it.

Current Overdraft Rules

2020 Rule Changes

Before 2020 After 2020
Higher unarranged rates Same rate for all overdrafts
Daily fees common Daily fees banned
Complex charging Single interest rate
Separate limits Clearer structure

How Banks Charge Now

Element Current Rules
Interest rate Single rate (typically 35-40% APR)
Same rate Arranged and unarranged
No daily fees For unarranged
Refused payments May incur charges

What Happens

If You Exceed Your Limit

Consequence Details
Interest charged On full overdrawn amount
Potential payment refusal Bank may bounce payments
Credit file impact Shows exceeded limit
Bank contact They may call/write
Overdraft review May reduce your limit

Payment Refusals

Scenario What Happens
Direct debit refused Payee not paid
Standing order fails Recipient not paid
Card declined Transaction blocked
Cheque bounced Returned unpaid

Knock-On Effects

Refused Payment Consequence
Mortgage Arrears marked
Utility bills May charge you
Council tax Enforcement risk
Insurance Policy may lapse
Credit card Late payment fee

Bank Actions

Immediate Response

Action Bank May…
Honour payment anyway Use internal discretion
Refuse payment Return unpaid
Contact you Alert to situation
Offer increase If eligible

Longer Term

If Pattern Continues Bank May…
Reduce overdraft Lower your limit
Remove overdraft Take it away
Call in debt Demand repayment
Close account In extreme cases

Credit Score Impact

What’s Recorded

Information On Credit File
Overdraft utilisation How much you use
Exceeded limits Shows to lenders
Missed payments If payments fail
Account status Satisfactory or not

Impact Level

Situation Credit Impact
Occasional slight exceeding Minor
Regular exceeding Moderate
Frequently over Significant
Payments bouncing Severe

What to Do Immediately

Step 1: Check Position

Action Why
Log into banking See exact position
Check pending What’s due out
Calculate shortfall Know the gap
Review week ahead Upcoming expenses

Step 2: Stop the Bleed

Action Details
Pause subscriptions If possible
Cancel non-essentials Immediately
Delay spending If you can
Use cash Avoid card for a few days

Step 3: Contact Bank

Request Possibility
Overdraft increase If eligible, good history
Temporary extension For specific period
Payment plan If in difficulty
Fee waiver If first occurrence

Getting Help

If You’re Struggling

Action Resource
Free debt advice StepChange, National Debtline
Benefit check Turn2us, Citizens Advice
Bank support Hardship teams
Breathing space 60-day protection

Breathing Space Scheme

Feature Details
Duration 60 days
Effect Creditors can’t contact
Interest Still accrues
How to get Through debt advisor

Alternatives to Overdraft

If Overdraft Is Expensive

Option Typical Rate
0% money transfer card 0% for period
Personal loan 7-15% APR
Credit union Lower rates
Overdraft 35-40% APR

Breaking the Cycle

Step Action
1 Calculate actual shortfall
2 Consider low-cost alternatives
3 Set up budget
4 Build buffer gradually

Cost of Overdrafts

Interest Example

Overdrawn Amount Monthly Interest (39.9% APR)
£100 ~£3.30
£500 ~£16.50
£1,000 ~£33.00
£2,000 ~£66.00

Vs Other Borrowing

Product Representative APR
Overdraft 35-40%
Credit card 19-29%
Personal loan 7-15%
Credit union 12-42%

Why People Stay In Overdraft

Reason Reality
Feels like my money It’s borrowed money
Convenient But expensive
Always been there Doesn’t mean it’s good
Scary to address Gets worse over time

Budget to Clear Overdraft

Example Plan

Starting Position £1,000 overdrawn
Income £2,000/month
Essential bills £1,500/month
Available £500/month
Time to clear 2 months

Clearing Strategy

Month Overdraft Interest Payment
1 £1,000 £33 £500
2 £533 £18 £500
3 £51 £2 £53
Cleared Month 3

Then Build Buffer

After Clearing Action
Keep saving Same £500
Build emergency fund 1 month buffer
Reduce overdraft limit Gradually
Eventually remove When confident

Preventing Future Issues

Set Up Alerts

Alert Type Trigger
Balance alerts Below certain level
Large transaction Over set amount
Weekly summary Regular updates
Approaching limit Overdraft warning

Emergency Planning

Buffer Why
£1,000 minimum Cover unexpected
Separate account Don’t spend it
Easy access But not too easy
Top up When used

Summary

Key Point Details
Same rate now Arranged and unarranged
No daily fees Since 2020
Credit impact Yes, if pattern
Act quickly Don’t ignore
Get help If struggling
If You Exceed Steps
1 Check position
2 Stop spending
3 Contact bank
4 Plan to clear
5 Build buffer