I like the idea of a less profit-driven business that is maybe more community-focused but I wonder if they have the same capability as a bank? Have you been able to do your banking needs at a credit union? Was the customer service decent?
- Hello_there ( @Hello_there@fedia.io ) 7•3 months ago
Great, yes, yes, yes.
They have a coop shared branch service that means you can go into any participating one and do any banking needs.
I pay nothing for banking/checking and I get great rates on savings acct and CDs. - curiousaur ( @curiousaur@reddthat.com ) English7•3 months ago
Excellent, I only use credit unions.
- Steve ( @Steve@communick.news ) English6•3 months ago
Never had an actual Bank account. For 30 years, I’ve only ever used Credit Unions. Never thought for a moment Banks may be able to help me better.
- magnetosphere ( @magnetosphere@fedia.io ) 6•3 months ago
Mine does have the same capabilities as a chain bank, but admittedly it took them a little longer to implement online features. The customer service is excellent. Because they’re a smaller organization, I can speak to an actual human who can personally and immediately solve my problem much quicker.
- peto (he/him) ( @peto@lemm.ee ) English5•3 months ago
I have a savings account with a credit union, they can offer some pretty good rates and will generally have a very open investment strategy. Customer service has been rather good, at least when accessed via phone. I don’t think my union offers things like current accounts, but I hear some do.
You experience is going to be heavily dependent on your specific union, they tend not to have as much money to throw around as major banks do, so don’t expect a bespoke app or anything like that.
- harrys_balzac ( @harrys_balzac@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) English4•3 months ago
I have, until recently, tried to bank only with credit unions. I have had a couple of poor experiences but nothing awful enough to get me to go back to banks.
As with anything else, do your homework. Not all credit unions are the same and not all are run well.
What you need from a credit union will help determine your choice. A couple near me focus on home mortgages while another is all about CDs and savings.
I do my own investing and found myself using CashApp more and more for lots of things and ended up closing my credit union account because I was getting just as good a deal on ATMs and services I used frequently.
- strawberry ( @strawberry@kbin.earth ) 3•3 months ago
it’s nice
they speak my language which is nice
aside from that, they’ve got really good rates on loans, though not so much on savings accounts
- edric ( @scytale@lemm.ee ) English3•3 months ago
I currently don’t have an account with a CU at the moment but based on what I’ve heard from people in my city, they are great with what they stand for, have great loan rates, and are friendly. The main problem is that they lag behind with technology. Their online banking and mobile apps are slow, buggy, and lack features. So make sure to take that into account.
- HubertManne ( @HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com ) 2•3 months ago
Large ones are just banks with a caveat and small ones are like small banks but I find they tend to have better interest rates and such. Work ones are handy as they tend to have branches located in relation to the work such that you can more easily do something on lunch or such.
- activistPnk ( @activistPnk@slrpnk.net ) English1•2 months ago
I don’t get why folks even care about interest rates when they are so negligably low anyway. When interest rates are ≤1%, I would rather get zero interest just to silence the excessive reporting, like a 1099-int for a couple dollars which serves as a kind of heartbeat signal for where your assets are kept and then having to pay your accountant to declare it. Not worth it. I would rather see the 1% go to a good cause, if not toward just improving the banking service.
- HubertManne ( @HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com ) 1•2 months ago
You can get over 1% currently now that the fed has the cental interest rates above zero. I mean its easy enough to not get interest. You can find checking accounts with zero interest even when rates are very high and you never need fear the 1099 then.
- activistPnk ( @activistPnk@slrpnk.net ) English1•2 months ago
Indeed I’ve seen basic checking accounts with no interest. Then the more feature-rich accounts which offer a number of perks at either a higher fee or higher requirements to offset the fee also include interest. That’s really backwards because an anti-feature is being bundled in. By giving up interest the client should get more features, not less.
- activistPnk ( @activistPnk@slrpnk.net ) English2•2 months ago
I’m done with credit unions. They just create the illusion of a small org but then farm you out to big companies via outsourcing anyway.
- Most credit unions have outsourced just about every aspect of their business. They are like shell companies all working as many different façades to the same giant corporations. CUs in-house expertise doesn’t go far beyond their branding and marketing. Your sensitive financial info gets shared around with a handful of giant corporations while giving the illusion that you have the privacy benefits of a small CU.
- billpay outsourced to 1 or 2 different billpay services nationwide
- monthly statement generation: outsourced to the same few corps
- statement printing: outsourced, then they charge you for it
- Credit unions spam the shit out of whatever email address you supply, thus enabling all entities handling the email to see where you bank each time the CU decides to spam you. Commercial banks are better on this in my experience. I think commercial banks have calculated that spam just angers people and drives them off, whereas credit unions are either not diligent enough to make that calculation or they are assuming their small org appearance will go a long way in obtaining forgiveness.
- Most credit unions have put their website on Cloudflare in the past few years. Which means:
- Consumers are generally forced to expose their account credentials to a privacy-abusing tech giant (while agreeing to be accountable for damage stemming from credential leakage)
- Consumers are generally forced to expose to their credit union their approximate physical location every single time they connect to the website as a consequence of Cloudflare. Which means if they move outside of the CUs service area some CUs will notice that and even freeze/lock the account. They tend to admit directly in their privacy policy that they collect IP addresses specifically for geolocation tracking of their customers.
- Consumers are generally forced to expose to their ISP where they bank as a consequence of Cloudflare. And considering Trump overturned an Obama policy that required ISPs to obtain consent for collecting and selling customer personal data, there is nothing to stop your ISP from selling info about where you bank to data brokers and debt collectors. Biden did not reverse Trump’s privacy sabotage.
- Cloudflare can at any moment decide to block you for any reason arbitrarily, and suddenly your web access to your money is gone.
- Consumers who are behind CGNAT outside of their control are often blocked by Cloudflare. If a snot-nose script kiddie in your CGNAT pool decides to scrape some websites, CF’s excessive protectionism might kick in and block the IP which could go to you next, and you lose access to your money because CF overreacted to a harmless snotnose kid.
Being free from Cloudflare sometimes means you can login over Tor and avoid most of the problems above. OTOH many commercial banks also block Tor increasingly more frequently lately (because they also want to track your physical whereabouts). There may be some Cloudflare-free CUs that still permit Tor logins though it’s becoming harder to find them.
Gratis paper statements are important more than you realise:
If you cannot find a bank or CU that gives you the privacy of Tor, the best feature to look for is gratis paper statements and paper checks so you can scrap the website and take back your privacy. It’s more common to find gratis paper statements from banks than CUs. As enshitification of the web proliferates and more FIs join Cloudflare, gratis paper statements is an important safety net so you can ditch their tech the moment it goes sour.
Regarding apps:
Credit unions do not write their own software. You have just a few closed-source Google Playstore banking app makers who all the credit unions outsource to. Whereas every commercial bank reinvents the wheel with their own implementation. For me it’s a shitshow no matter what. I am not going to enter Google Playstore and tell Google where I bank and let Google track exactly which software version I have which also reveals what vulns I inherit, to then run a closed-source app that snoops on me in countless unknown ways. Fuck all that.
- Most credit unions have outsourced just about every aspect of their business. They are like shell companies all working as many different façades to the same giant corporations. CUs in-house expertise doesn’t go far beyond their branding and marketing. Your sensitive financial info gets shared around with a handful of giant corporations while giving the illusion that you have the privacy benefits of a small CU.
- JCPhoenix ( @JCPhoenix@beehaw.org ) English2•2 months ago
I’m a member of a big credit union in my old city, but I don’t use it as my main bank. Honestly, I don’t see that many benefits.
- When I was trying to finance a new car at the start of 2021, the credit union rates were actually higher than the big banks and way higher than even dealership financing; I went with the dealership financing (>4% vs 1.9%)
- Also, they wouldn’t even give me a car loan because I lacked a history of a car loan. Admittedly, they weren’t the only bank that denied me in this way.
- Savings accounts rates are like 1% versus like 4-4.5% at like Ally or Capital One. Probably because my credit union is still as a B&M bank, while the others are online.
- My CU talks up annual member dividends, but you have to have significant amounts of money in your accounts and/or various products with them, such as mortgages or loans, before you get anything.
- The online banking and app experience is pretty trash; takes (relatively) forever for balances to update after even doing things like savings to checking transfers or vice versa. This sometimes affects Zelle interbank transfers, as Zelle thinks there’s not enough money in an account for a transfer, even though there is.
- Plus, they’re Zelle transfers are sometimes slow as shit, sometimes taking 2-3days. I know Zelle isn’t always instant, but it’s annoying because Zelle is often billed as instant transfers.
So I just use my CU accounts as a sorts of savings. I squirrel money away in there, like $25/week for a rainy day of sorts, but that’s about it.
I get much more utility and benefit out of my accounts at other non-CU banks.
- limelight79 ( @limelight79@lemm.ee ) English2•2 months ago
I have accounts at two credit unions. One I love, one is okay.
The first one has excellent customer service and was doing online banking before most banks even thought it existed - they had software you’d use to dial into their system with your modem. Obviously that has gone by the wayside but they have an excellent, full featured site. Rates are generally competitive. (Unfortunately I live in a different state than they are based in, so I can’t get my mortgage through them any more - they used to do it, but stopped offering mortgages in my state years ago.) They have nice touches, like if you withdraw cash from an ATM that isn’t theirs, they’ll refund the ATM fees you were probably charged.
The other credit union is fine. No major complaints really, but after the experience with the first one, the second one just doesn’t compare. Their website is functional and covers all the normal pieces of online banking, but doesn’t have nearly the features the other one does. I probably wouldn’t know what’s missing if I hadn’t used the first one.
We also have a regular bank. No major complaints with them either, but it’s not one of the biggies like Chase. One of the few remaining regional bank chains.
- scoobford ( @scoobford@lemmy.zip ) English1•2 months ago
Hey, I’m a banker. Obviously, credit unions are smaller businesses than a large bank. If you haven’t used a small bank before, note that it is different.
But the biggest thing that I can think of you may not expect is that credit unions are not insured the same as a bank. Some may be insured adequately for your needs, or they may not. Do your homework.
- dhtseany ( @dhtseany@lemmy.ml ) English1•3 months ago
Personally it’s been a terrible experience that I don’t intend to repeat. The rates aren’t nearly as good as others in this thread are suggesting, the app experience is trash and everything I do online requires human intervention to approve my transactions during regular business hours. Tbh I fail to see the niche in the market filled by these awful, tiny banks. Save yourself the headache and just go with a national level bank you’ve heard of before.
- UltraGiGaGigantic ( @UltraGiGaGigantic@lemmy.ml ) English1•2 months ago
Considering the competition, they are all good in comparison.
To find a great one is rare though.
Edit: I see lots of bad experiences and figured I should add more context. I use credit unions that are not available to the public. There is a requirement to work somewhere for all my CUs. Perhaps that is why i have had better luck.
I believe the bad stories, we live in the shitter multiverse after all.