1. Written and electronic pre-acquisition disclosures. Section
1005.4(a)(1) generally requires that disclosures be made in writing;
written disclosures may be provided in electronic form in accordance
with the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act
(E-Sign Act) (15 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.). Because section 1005.18(b)(6)(i)(B)
provides that electronic disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)
need not meet the consumer consent or other applicable provisions
of the E-Sign Act, section 1005.18(b) addresses certain requirements
for written and electronic pre-acquisition disclosures separately.
Section 1005.18(b) also addresses specific requirements for pre-acquisition
disclosures provided orally.
2. Currency. Fee amounts required to be disclosed
by section 1005.18(b) may be disclosed in a foreign currency for a
prepaid account denominated in that foreign currency, other than the
fee for the purchase price required by section 1005.18(b)(5). For
example, a prepaid account sold in a U.S. airport intended for use
in England may disclose in pound sterling (£) the fees required to
be disclosed in the short form and long form disclosures and outside the
short form disclosure, except for the purchase price.
18(b)(1) Timing of Disclosures 18(b)(1)(i) General 1. Disclosing the short
form and long form before acquisition. Section 1005.18(b)(1)(i)
generally requires delivery of a short form disclosure as described
in section 1005.18(b)(2), accompanied by the information required
to be disclosed by section 1005.18(b)(5), and a long form disclosure
as described in section 1005.18(b)(4) before a consumer acquires a
prepaid account.
i. For purposes of section 1005.18(b)(1)(i),
a consumer acquires a prepaid account by purchasing, opening or choosing
to be paid via a prepaid account, as illustrated by the following
examples:
A. A consumer inquires about obtaining
a prepaid account at a branch location of a bank. A consumer then
receives the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b). After receiving
the disclosures, a consumer then opens a prepaid account with the
bank. This consumer received the short form and long form pre-acquisition
in accordance with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i).
B. A consumer learns that he or she
can receive wages via a payroll card account, at which time the consumer
is provided with a payroll card and the disclosures required by section
1005.18(b) to review. The consumer then chooses to receive wages via
a payroll card account. These disclosures were provided pre-acquisition
in compliance with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i). By contrast, if a consumer
receives the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b) to review
at the end of the first pay period, after the consumer received the
first payroll payment on the payroll card, these disclosures were
provided to a consumer post-acquisition, and thus not provided in
compliance with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i).
ii. Section 1005.18(b)(1)(i)
permits delivery of the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)
at the time the consumer receives the prepaid account, rather than
prior to acquisition, for prepaid accounts that are used for disbursing
funds to consumers when the financial institution or third party making
the disbursement does not offer any alternative means for the consumer
to receive those funds in lieu of accepting the prepaid account. For
example, a utility company refunds consumers’ initial deposits for
its utility services via prepaid accounts delivered to consumers by
mail. Neither the utility company nor the financial institution that
issues the prepaid accounts offer another means for a consumer to
receive that refund other than by accepting the prepaid account. In
this case, the financial institution may provide the disclosures required
by section 1005.18(b) together with the prepaid account (e.g., in
the same envelope as the prepaid account); it is not required to deliver
the disclosures separately prior to delivery of the prepaid account.
2. Disclosures
provided electronically. Disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)
may be provided before or after a consumer has initiated the process
of acquiring a prepaid account electronically. When the disclosures
required by section 1005.18(b) are presented after a consumer has
initiated the process for acquiring a prepaid account online or via
a mobile device, but before a consumer chooses to accept the prepaid
account, such disclosures are also made pre-acquisition in accordance
with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i). The disclosures required by section
1005.18(b) that are provided electronically when a consumer acquires
a prepaid account electronically are not considered to be given pre-acquisition
unless a consumer must view the web page containing the disclosures
before choosing to accept the prepaid account. The following examples
illustrate several methods by which a financial institution may present
section 1005.18(b) disclosures before a consumer acquires a prepaid
account electronically in compliance with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i):
i. A financial institution presents the
short form disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(2), together with the
information required by section 1005.18(b)(5), and the long form disclosure
required by section 1005.18(b)(4) on the same web page. A consumer
must view the web page before choosing to accept the prepaid account.
ii. A financial institution
presents the short form disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(2),
together with the information required by section 1005.18(b)(5), on
a web page. The financial institution includes, after the short form
disclosure or as part of the statement required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii),
a link that directs the consumer to a separate web page containing
the long form disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(4). The consumer
must view the web page containing the long form disclosure before
choosing to accept the prepaid account.
iii. A financial institution presents on
a web page the short form disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(2),
together with the information required by section 1005.18(b)(5), followed
by the initial disclosures required by section 1005.7(b), which contains
the long form disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(4), in accordance
with section 1005.18(f)(1). The financial institution includes, after
the short form disclosure or as part of the statement required by
section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii), a link that directs the consumer to the
section of the initial disclosures containing the long form disclosure
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4). A consumer must view this web page
before choosing to accept the prepaid account.
18(b)(1)(ii) Disclosures for Prepaid Accounts
Acquired in Retail Locations 1. Retail locations. Section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii)
sets forth an alternative timing regime for pre-acquisition disclosures
for prepaid accounts acquired in person at retail locations. For purposes
of section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), a retail location is a store or other
physical site where a consumer can purchase a prepaid account in person
and that is operated by an entity other than the financial institution
that issues the prepaid account. A branch of a financial institution
that offers its own prepaid accounts is not a retail location with
respect to those accounts and, thus, both the short form and the long
form disclosure must be provided pre-acquisition pursuant to the timing
requirement set forth in section 1005.18(b)(1)(i).
2. Disclosures provided inside prepaid
account access device packaging material. Except when providing
the long form disclosure post-acquisition in accordance with the retail
location exception set forth in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), the disclosures
required by section 1005.18(b)(2), (4), and (5) must be provided to
a consumer pre-acquisition in compliance with section 1005.18(b)(1)(i).
A short form disclosure is not considered to have been provided pre-acquisition
if, for example, it is inside the packaging material accompanying
a prepaid account access device such that the consumer cannot see or access the disclosure before acquiring the prepaid account.
3. Consumers working in
retail locations. A payroll card account offered to consumers
working in retail locations is not eligible for the retail location
exception in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii); thus, a consumer employee
must receive both the short form and long form disclosures for the
payroll card account pre-acquisition pursuant to the timing requirement
set forth in section 1005.18(b)(1)(i).
4. Providing the long form disclosure by telephone
and website pursuant to the retail location exception. Pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), a financial institution may provide
the long form disclosure described in section 1005.18(b)(4) after
a consumer acquires a prepaid account in a retail location, if the
conditions set forth in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii)(A) through (D) are
met. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii)(C), a financial institution
must make the long form disclosure accessible to consumers by telephone
and via a website when not providing a written version of the long
form disclosure pre-acquisition. A financial institution may, for
example, provide the long form disclosure by telephone using an interactive
voice response or similar system or by using a customer service agent. A
financial institution that has not obtained the consumer’s contact
information is not required to comply with the requirements set forth
in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii)(D). A financial institution is able to
contact the consumer when, for example, it has the consumer’s mailing
address or email address.
18(b)(1)(iii) Disclosures for Prepaid Accounts Acquired Orally by
Telephone 1. Prepaid accounts acquired by telephone. Section 1005.18(b)(1)(iii)
sets forth requirements for prepaid accounts acquired orally by telephone.
For purposes of section 1005.18(b)(1)(iii), a prepaid account is considered
to have been acquired orally by telephone when a consumer speaks to
a customer service agent or communicates with an automated system,
such as an interactive voice response system, to provide personally
identifiable information to acquire a prepaid account. Prepaid accounts
acquired using a mobile device without speaking to a customer service
agent or communicating with an automated system are not considered
to have been acquired orally by telephone.
18(b)(2) Short Form Disclosure Content 1. Disclosures
that are not applicable or are free. The short form disclosures
required by section 1005.18(b)(2) must always be provided prior to
prepaid account acquisition, even when a particular feature is free
or is not applicable to a specific prepaid account product. For example,
if a financial institution does not charge a fee to a consumer for
withdrawing money at an automated teller machine in the financial
institution’s network or an affiliated network, which is required
to be disclosed pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii), the financial
institution would list “ATM withdrawal in-network” on the short form
disclosure and list “$0” as the fee. If, however, the financial institution
does not have its own network or an affiliated network from which
a consumer can withdraw money via automated teller machine, the financial
institution would list “ATM withdrawal in-network” on the short form
disclosure but instead of disclosing a fee amount, state “N/A.” (The
financial institution must still disclose any fee it charges for out-of-network
ATM withdrawals.)
2. Prohibition on disclosure of finance charges. Pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(3)(vi), a financial institution may not include in the
short form disclosure finance charges as described in Regulation Z,
12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11), imposed in connection with a covered separate
credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined
in section 1026.61. See also comment 18(b)(3)(vi)-1.
18(b)(2)(i) Periodic Fee 1. Periodic fee variation. If the amount of a fee disclosed on the short form could vary, the
financial institution must disclose in the short form the information
required by section 1005.18(b)(3)(i). If the amount of the periodic
fee could vary, the financial institution may opt instead to use an
alternative disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(3)(ii). See comments 18(b)(3)(i)-1 and 18(b)(3)(ii)-1.
18(b)(2)(iii) ATM Withdrawal Fees 1. International ATM withdrawal
fees. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii), a financial institution
must disclose the fees imposed when a consumer uses an automated teller
machine to initiate a withdrawal of cash in the United States from
the prepaid account, both within and outside of the financial institution’s
network or a network affiliated with the financial institution. A
financial institution may not disclose its fee (if any) for using
an automated teller machine to initiate a withdrawal of cash in a
foreign country in the disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii),
although it may be required to disclose that fee as an additional
fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
18(b)(2)(iv) Cash Reload Fee 1. Total of all charges. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iv), a financial institution must
disclose the total of all charges imposed when a consumer reloads
cash into a prepaid account, including charges imposed by the financial
institution as well as any charges that may be imposed by third parties
for the cash reload. The cash reload fee includes the cost of adding
cash to the prepaid account at a point-of-sale terminal, the cost
of purchasing an additional card or other device on which cash is
loaded and then transferred into the prepaid account, or any other
method a consumer may use to reload cash into the prepaid account.
For example, a financial institution does not have its own proprietary
cash reload network and instead contracts with a third-party reload
network for this service. The financial institution itself does not
charge any fee related to cash reloads but the third-party reload
network charges a fee of $3.95 per cash reload. The financial institution
must disclose the cash reload fee as $3.95. If the financial institution
offers more than one method to reload cash into the prepaid account,
section 1005.18(b)(3)(i) requires disclosure of the highest cash reload
fee. For example, a financial institution contracts with two third-party
cash reload networks; one third party charges $3.95 for a point-of-sale
reload and the other third party charges $2.95 for purchase of a reload
pack. In addition to the third-party cash reload charge, the financial
institution charges a $1 fee for every cash reload. The financial
institution must disclose the cash reload fee on the short form as
$4.95, that is, the highest third-party fee plus the financial institution’s
$1 fee. See comment 18(b)(3)(v)-1 for additional guidance regarding
third-party fees for cash reloads.
2. Cash deposit fee. If a financial institution
does not permit cash reloads via a third-party reload network but
instead permits cash deposits, for example, in a bank branch, the
term “cash deposit” may be substituted for “cash reload.”
18(b)(2)(v) ATM Balance Inquiry Fees 1. International
ATM balance inquiry fees. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(v),
a financial institution must disclose the fees imposed when a consumer
uses an automated teller machine to check the balance of the prepaid
account in the United States, both within and outside of the financial
institution’s network or a network affiliated with the financial institution.
A financial institution may not disclose its fee (if any) for using
an automated teller machine to check the balance of the prepaid account
in a foreign country in the disclosure required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(v),
although it may be required to disclose that fee as an additional
fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
18(b)(2)(vii) Inactivity Fee 1. Inactivity fee conditions. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(vii) requires disclosure of any fee for non-use,
dormancy, or inactivity of the prepaid account as well as the conditions
that trigger the financial institution to impose that fee. For example,
a financial institution that imposes an inactivity fee of $1 per month
after 12 months without any transactions on the prepaid account would
disclose on the short form “Inactivity (after 12 months with no transactions)”
and “$1.00 per month.”
18(b)(2)(viii)
Statements Regarding Additional Fee Types 18(b)(2)(viii)(A) Statement Regarding Number
of Additional Fee Types Charged 1. Fee types counted in total number of additional
fee types. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) requires a statement
disclosing the number of additional fee types the financial institution
may charge consumers with respect to the prepaid account, using the
following clause or a substantially similar clause: “We charge [x]
other types of fees.” The number of additional fee types disclosed
must reflect the total number of fee types under which the financial
institution may charge fees, excluding fees required to be disclosed
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(i) through (vii) and (b)(5) and
any finance charges as described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11),
imposed in connection with a covered separate credit feature accessible
by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined in 12 CFR 1026.61. The
following clarify which fee types to include in the total number of
additional fee types:
i. Fee types
excluded from the number of additional fee types. The number
of additional fee types required to be disclosed pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) does not include the fees otherwise required
to be disclosed in the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(i)
through (vii), nor any purchase fee or activation fee required to
be disclosed outside the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(5).
It also does not include any finance charges as described in Regulation
Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11), imposed in connection with a credit feature
defined in 12 CFR 1026.61. The number of additional fee types includes
only fee types under which the financial institution may charge fees;
accordingly, third-party fees are not included unless they are imposed
for services performed on behalf of the financial institution. In
addition, the number of additional fee types includes only fee types
the financial institution may charge consumers with respect to the
prepaid account; accordingly, additional fee types does not include
other revenue sources such as interchange fees or fees paid by employers
for payroll card programs, government agencies for government benefit
programs, or other entities sponsoring prepaid account programs for
financial disbursements.
ii. Fee types counted in the number of
additional fee types. Fee types that bear a relationship to,
but are separate from, the static fee types disclosed in the short
form must be counted as additional fees for purposes of section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii).
For example, the ATM withdrawal and ATM balance inquiry fee types
required to be disclosed respectively by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii)
and (v) that are excluded from the number of additional fee types
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii) do not include such services
outside of the United States. Thus, any international ATM fees charged
by the financial institution for ATM withdrawal or balance inquiries
must each be counted in the total number of additional fee types.
Similarly, any fees for reloading funds into a prepaid account in
a form other than cash (such as electronic reload and check reload,
as described in comment 18(b)(2)(viii)(A)-2) must be counted in the
total number of additional fee types because section 1005.18(b)(2)(iv)
is limited to cash reloads. Also, additional fee types disclosed in
the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) must be counted
in the total number of additional fee types.
2. Examples of fee types and
fee variations. The term fee type, as used in section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)
and (ix), is a general category under which a financial institution
charges fees to consumers. A financial institution may charge only
one fee within a particular fee type, or may charge two or more variations
of fees within the same fee type. The following is a list of examples
of fee types a financial institution may use when determining both
the number of additional fee types charged pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A)
and any additional fee types to disclose pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
A financial institution may create an appropriate name for other additional
fee types.
i. Fee types related to reloads of funds. Fee types for reloading
funds into a prepaid account. Fees for cash reloads are required to
be disclosed in the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iv)
and that such fees are not counted in the total number of additional
fee types or disclosed as an additional fee type pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix). Fee types for other methods to reload funds, such
as Electronic reload or Check reload, would be counted in the total
number of additional fee types and may be required to be disclosed
as additional fee types pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
A. Electronic reload. Fees for reloading
a prepaid account through electronic methods. Fee variations within
this fee type may include fees for transferring funds from
a consumer’s bank account via ACH, reloads conducted using a debit
card or credit card, and for incoming wire transfers.
B. Check reload. Fees for reloading a prepaid account using checks. Fee variations
within this fee type may include fees for depositing checks at an
ATM, depositing checks with a teller at the financial institution’s
branch location, mailing checks to the financial institution for deposit,
and depositing checks using remote deposit capture.
ii. Fee types related to withdrawals of funds. Fee types for withdrawing
funds from a prepaid account. Per purchase fees and ATM withdrawal
fees within the United States are fee types required to be disclosed
in the short form respectively pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ii)
and (iii) and thus such fees are not counted in the total number of
additional fee types or disclosed as an additional fee type pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). Fee types for other methods to withdraw
funds, such as Electronic withdrawal, Teller withdrawal, Cash back
at point of sale (POS), and Account closure would be counted in the
total of additional fee types and may be required to be disclosed
as additional fee types pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
A. Electronic withdrawal. Fees for
withdrawing funds from a prepaid account through electronic methods
other than an ATM. Fee variations within this fee type may include
fees for transferring funds from the prepaid account to a consumer’s
bank account or other destination.
B. Teller
withdrawal. Fees for withdrawing funds from a prepaid account
in person with a teller at a bank or credit union. Fee variations
within this fee type may include fees for withdrawing funds, whether
at the financial institution’s own branch locations or at another
bank or credit union.
C. Cash back at POS. Fees for withdrawing
cash from a prepaid account via cash back at a merchant’s point-of-sale
terminal.
D. Account closure. Fees for closing out a
prepaid account, such as for a check refund. Fee variations within
this fee type may include fees for regular and expedited delivery
of close-out funds.
iii. Fee types
related to international transactions. Fee types for international
transactions and ATM activity.
A. International ATM withdrawal. Fees for withdrawing funds at
an ATM outside the United States. This fee type does not include fees
for ATM withdrawals in the United States, as such fees are required
to be disclosed in the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii).
B. International ATM balance inquiry. Fees
for balance inquiries at an ATM outside the United States. This fee
type does not include fees for ATM balance inquiries in the United
States, as such fees are required to be disclosed in the short form
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(v).
C. International
transaction (excluding ATM withdrawal and balance inquiry). Fees
for transactions outside the United States. Fee variations within
this fee type may include fees for currency conversion, foreign exchange
processing, and other charges for transactions outside of the United
States.
iv. Bill payment. Fees for bill payment
services. Fee variations within this fee type may include fees for
ACH bill payment, paper check bill payment, check cancellation, and
expedited delivery of paper check.
v. Person-to-person
or card-to-card transfer of funds. Fees for transferring funds
from one prepaid account to another prepaid account. Fee variations
within this fee type may include fees for transferring funds to another
prepaid account within or outside of a specified prepaid account program,
transferring funds to another cardholder within the United States
or outside the United States, and expedited transfer of funds.
vi. Paper checks. Fees for providing paper
checks that draw on the prepaid account. Fee variations within this
fee type may include fees for providing checks and associated shipping
costs. This does not include checks issued as part of a bill pay service,
which are addressed in comment 18(b)(2)(viii)(A)-2.iv above.
vii. Stop payment. Fees for stopping payment of a preauthorized transfer
of funds.
viii. Fee types related to card services. Fee
types for card services.
A. Card replacement. Fees for replacing or reissuing a prepaid card that has been lost,
stolen, damaged, or that has expired. Fee variations within this fee
types may include fees for replacing the card, regular or expedited
delivery of the replacement card, and international card replacement.
B. Secondary card. Fees for issuing an additional
access device assigned to a particular prepaid account.
C. Personalized card. Fees for customizing or personalizing a prepaid
card. ix. Legal. Fees for legal process. Fee variations within this
fee type may include fees for garnishments, attachments, levies, and
other court or administrative orders against a prepaid account.
3. Multiple service plans. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(vi),
a financial institution using the multiple service plan short form
disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2) must
disclose only the fee for calling customer service via a live agent.
Thus, pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii), any charge for calling
customer service via an interactive voice response system must be
counted in the total number of additional fee types.
4. Consistency in additional fee type categorization. A financial institution must use the same categorization of fee
types in the number of additional fee types disclosed pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii) and in its determination of which additional
fee types to disclose pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
18(b)(2)(viii)(B) Statement Directing Consumers
to Disclosure of Additional Fee Types 1. Statement clauses. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(B) requires,
if a financial institution makes a disclosure of additional fee types
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix), it must include in the short
form a statement directing consumers to that disclosure, located after
but on the same line of text as the statement regarding the number
of additional fee types required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A),
using the following clause or a substantially similar clause: “Here
are some of them:”. A financial institution that makes no disclosure
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) may not include a disclosure
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(B). The following examples
provide guidance regarding substantially similar clauses a financial
institution may use in certain circumstances to make its disclosures
under section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) and (B):
i. A financial institution that has one
additional fee type and discloses that additional fee type pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) might provide the statements required
by section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) and (B) together as: “We charge
1 other type of fee. It is:”.
ii. A financial institution that has five
additional fee types and discloses one of those additional fee types
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) might provide the statements
required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) and (B) together as: “We
charge 5 other types of fees. Here is 1 of them:”.
iii. A financial institution that has two
additional fee types and discloses both of those fee types pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) might provide the statement required
by section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A) and (B) together as: “We charge
2 other types of fees. They are:”.
18(b)(2)(ix) Disclosure of Additional Fee
Types 18(b)(2)(ix)(A)
Determination of Which Additional Fee Types to Disclose 1. Number of fee types
to disclose. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A) requires disclosure
of the two fee types that generate the highest revenue from consumers
for the prepaid account program or across prepaid account programs that share
the same fee schedule during the time period provided in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D)
and (E), excluding the categories set forth in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1) through (3). See comment 18(b)(2)(viii)(A)-2
for guidance on and examples of fee types. If a prepaid account program
has two fee types that satisfy the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A),
it must disclose both fees. If a prepaid account program has three
or more fee types that potentially satisfy the criteria in section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A), the financial institution must disclose only
the two fee types that generate the highest revenue from consumers. See comment 18(b)(2)(ix)(B)-1 for guidance regarding the disclosure
of additional fee types for a prepaid account with fewer than two
fee types that satisfy the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A).
2. Abbreviations. Commonly
accepted or readily understandable abbreviations may be used as needed
for additional fee types and fee variations disclosed pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). For example, to accommodate on one line
in the short form disclosure the additional fee types “international
ATM balance inquiry” or “person-to-person transfer of funds,” with
or without fee variations, a financial institution may choose to abbreviate
the fee type name as “Int’l ATM inquiry” or “P2P transfer.”
3. Revenue from consumers. The revenue calculation for the disclosure of additional fee types
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A) is based on fee types that
the financial institution may charge consumers with respect to the
prepaid account. The calculation excludes other revenue sources such
as revenue generated from interchange fees and fees paid by employers
for payroll card programs, government agencies for government benefit
programs, and other entities sponsoring prepaid account programs for
financial disbursements. It also excludes third-party fees, unless
they are imposed for services performed on behalf of the financial
institution.
4. Assessing
revenue within and across prepaid account programs to determine disclosure
of additional fee types. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A),
the disclosure of the two fee types that generate the highest revenue
from consumers must be determined for each prepaid account program
or across prepaid account programs that share the same fee schedule.
Thus, if a financial institution offers more than one prepaid account
program, unless the programs share the same fee schedule, the financial
institution must consider the fee revenue data separately for each
prepaid account program and not consolidate the fee revenue data across
prepaid account programs. Prepaid account programs are deemed to have
the same fee schedules if they charge the same fee amounts, including
offering the same fee waivers and fee reductions for the same features.
The following examples illustrate how to assess revenue within and
across prepaid account programs to determine the disclosure of additional
fee types:
i. Prepaid account programs with different fee schedules. A financial
institution offers multiple prepaid account programs and each program
has a different fee schedule. The financial institution must consider
the revenue from consumers for each program separately; it may not
consider the revenue from all of its prepaid account programs together
in determining the disclosure of additional fee types for its programs.
ii. Prepaid account programs with identical fee
schedules. A financial institution offers multiple prepaid account
programs and they all share the same fee schedule. The financial institution
may consider the revenue across all of its prepaid account programs
together in determining the disclosure of additional fee types for
its programs.
iii. Prepaid account programs with both different
fee schedules and identical fee schedules. A financial institution
offers multiple prepaid account programs, some of which share the
same fee schedule. The financial institution may consider the revenue
across all prepaid account programs with identical fee schedules in
determining the disclosure of additional fee types for those programs.
The financial institution must separately consider the revenue from
each of the prepaid account programs with unique fee schedules.
iv. Multiple service plan prepaid account programs. A financial
institution that discloses multiple service plans on a short form
disclosure as permitted by section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2)
must consider revenue across all of those plans in determining the
disclosure of additional fee types for that program. If, however,
the financial institution instead is disclosing the default service
plan pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(1), the financial
institution must consider the revenue generated from consumers for
the default service plan only. See section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2) and comment 18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2)-1 for guidance on what
constitutes multiple service plans.
5. Exclusions. Once the financial
institution has calculated the fee revenue data for the prepaid account
program or across prepaid account programs that share the same fee
schedule during the appropriate time period, it must remove from consideration
the categories excluded pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1) through (3) before determining the fee types, if any,
that generated the highest revenue.
i. Exclusion
for fee types required to be disclosed elsewhere. Fee types otherwise
required to be disclosed in or outside the short form are excluded
from the additional fee types required to be disclosed pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1). Thus, the following fee types
are excluded: Periodic fee, per purchase fee, ATM withdrawal fees
(for ATM withdrawals in the United States), cash reload fee, ATM balance
inquiry fees (for ATM balance inquiries in the United States), customer
service fees, and inactivity fee. However, while the cash reload fee
type is excluded, other reload fee types, such as electronic reload
and check reload, are not excluded under section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1) and thus may be disclosed as additional fee types pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). Similarly, while the fee types ATM withdrawal
and ATM balance inquiry in the United States are excluded, international
ATM withdrawal and international ATM balance inquiry fees are not
excluded under section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1) and thus may
be disclosed as additional fee types pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
Also pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(1), the purchase
price and activation fee, if any, required to be disclosed outside
the short form disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(5), are excluded
from the additional fee types required to be disclosed pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
ii. De minimis exclusion. Any fee
types that generated less than 5 percent of the total revenue from
consumers for the prepaid account program or across prepaid account
programs that share the same fee schedule during the time period provided
in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D) and (E) are excluded from the additional
fee types required to be disclosed pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(2). For example, for a particular prepaid account program over
the appropriate time period, bill payment, check reload, and card
replacement are the only fee types that generated 5 percent or more
of the total revenue from consumers at, respectively, 15 percent,
10 percent, and 7 percent. Two other fee types, legal fee and personalized
card, generated revenue below 1 percent of the total revenue from
consumers. The financial institution must disclose bill payment and
check reload as the additional fee types for that particular prepaid
account program because those two fee types generated the highest
revenue from consumers from among the categories not excluded from
disclosure as additional fee types. For a different prepaid account
program over the appropriate time period, bill payment is the only
fee type that generated 5 percent or more of the total revenue from
consumers. Two other fee types, check reload and card replacement,
each generated revenue below 5 percent of the total revenue from consumers.
The financial institution must disclose bill payment as an additional
fee type for that particular prepaid account program because it is
the only fee type that satisfies the criteria of section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A).
The financial institution may, but is not required to, disclose either check
reload or card replacement on the short form as well, pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B). See comment 18(b)(2)(ix)(B)-1.
iii. Exclusion for credit-related fees. Any
finance charges as described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11),
imposed in connection with a covered separate credit feature accessible
by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined in 12 CFR 1026.61, are
excluded from the additional fee types required to be disclosed pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A)(3). Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(viii)(A)(2), such finance charges are also excluded from the number of
additional fee types disclosed.
18(b)(2)(ix)(B) Disclosure of Fewer Than
Two Additional Fee Types 1. Disclosure of one or no additional fee types. The following examples provide guidance on the additional fee types
disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B) for a prepaid
account with fewer than two fee types that satisfy the criteria in
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A):
i. A financial institution has a prepaid
account program with only one fee type that satisfies the criteria
in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A) and thus, pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A),
the financial institution must disclose that one fee type. The prepaid
account program has three other fee types that generate revenue from
consumers, but they do not exceed the de minimis threshold or otherwise
satisfy the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B). Pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B), the financial institution is not required
to make any additional disclosure, but it may choose to disclose one
of the three fee types that do not meet the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A).
ii. A financial institution
has a prepaid account program with four fee types that generate revenue
from consumers, but none exceeds the de minimis threshold or otherwise
satisfy the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A). Pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B), the financial institution is not required
to make any disclosure, but it may choose to disclose one or two of
the fee types that do not meet the criteria in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A).
2. No disclosure
of finance charges as an additional fee type. Pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(3)(vi), a financial institution may not disclose any finance
charges as a voluntary additional fee disclosure under section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(B).
18(b)(2)(ix)(C) Fee Variations
in Additional Fee Types 1. Two or more fee variations. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(C)
specifies how to disclose additional fee types with two fee variations,
more than two fee variations, and for multiple service plans pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2). See comment 18(b)(2)(viii)(A)-2
for guidance on and examples of fee types and fee variations within
those fee types. The following examples illustrate how to disclose
two-tier fees and other fee variations in additional fee types:
i. Two fee variations with different fee amounts. A financial institution
charges a fee of $1 for providing a card replacement using standard
mail service and charges a fee of $5 for providing a card replacement
using expedited delivery. The financial institution must calculate
the total revenue generated from consumers for all card replacements,
both via standard mail service and expedited delivery, during the
required time period to determine whether it is required to disclose
card replacement as an additional fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
Because there are only two fee variations for the fee type “card replacement,”
if card replacement is required to be disclosed as an additional fee
type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A), the financial institution
must disclose both fee variations pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(C).
Thus, the financial institution would disclose on the short form the
fee type and two variations as “Card replacement (regular or expedited
delivery)” and the fee amount as “$1.00 or $5.00”.
ii. More than two fee variations. A financial institution offers
two methods of bill payment—via ACH and paper check—and offers two
modes of delivery for bill payments made by paper check—regular standard
mail service and expedited delivery. The financial institution charges
$0.25 for bill pay via ACH, $0.50 for bill pay via paper check sent
by regular standard mail service, and $3 for bill pay via paper check
sent via expedited delivery. The financial institution must calculate
the total revenue generated from consumers for all methods of bill
pay and all modes of delivery during the required time period to determine
whether it must disclose bill payment as an additional fee type pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). Because there are more than two fee
variations for the fee type “bill payment,” if bill payment is required
to be disclosed as an additional fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(A),
the financial institution has two options for the disclosure. The
financial institution may disclose the highest fee, $3, followed by
a symbol, such as an asterisk, linked to a statement explaining that
the fee could be lower depending on how and where the prepaid account
is used, pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(3)(i). Thus, the financial
institution would disclose on the short form the fee type as “Bill
payment” and the fee amount as “$3.00*”. Alternatively, the financial
institution may consolidate the fee variations into two categories,
such as regular delivery and expedited delivery. In this case, the
financial institution would make this disclosure on the short form
as: “Bill payment (regular or expedited delivery)” and the fee amount
as “$0.50* or $3.00”.
iii. Two fee variations with like fee amounts. A financial institution offers two methods of check reload for which
it charges a fee—depositing checks at an ATM and depositing checks
with a teller at the financial institution’s branch locations. There
is a fee of $0.50 for both methods of check deposit. The financial
institution must calculate the total revenue generated from both of
these check reload methods during the required time period to determine
whether it must disclose this fee type as an additional fee type pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). Because the fee amounts are the same
for the two methods of check deposit, if the fee type is required
to be disclosed as an additional fee type, the financial institution’s
options for disclosing this fee type in accordance with section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(C)
and (b)(3)(iii) include: “Check reload (ATM or teller check dep)”
and the fee amount as “$0.50” or “Check reload” and the fee amount
as “$0.50”.
iv. Multiple service plans. A financial institution
provides a short form disclosure for multiple service plans pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2). Notwithstanding that an
additional fee type has only two fee variations, a financial institution
must disclose the highest fee in accordance with section 1005.18(b)(3)(i).
2. One fee variation
under a particular fee type. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(C) provides
in part that, if a financial institution only charges one fee under
a particular fee type, the financial institution must disclose the
name of the additional fee type and the fee amount; it may, but is
not required to, disclose also the name of the one fee variation,
if any, for which the fee amount is charged, in a format substantially
similar to that used to disclose the two-tier fees required by section
1005.18(b)(2)(v) and (vi), except that the financial institution must
disclose only the one fee variation name and fee amount instead of
two. For example, a financial institution offers one method of electronic
reload for which it charges a fee—electronic reload conducted using
a debit card. The financial institution must calculate the total revenue
generated from consumers for the fee type electronic reload (i.e.,
in this case, electronic reloads conducted using a debit card) during
the required time period to determine whether it must disclose electronic
reload as an additional fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
Because the financial institution only charges one fee variation under
the fee type electronic reload, if this fee type is required to be
disclosed as an additional fee type, the financial institution has
two options for disclosing this fee type in accordance with section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(C):
“Electronic reload (debit card)” and the fee amount as “$1.00” or
“Electronic reload” and the fee amount as “$1.00”.
18(b)(2)(ix)(D) Timing of Initial Assessment
of Additional Fee Types Disclosure 18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(1) Existing Prepaid Account
Programs as of April 1, 2019 1. 24 month period with available data. Section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(1) requires for a prepaid account program
in effect as of April 1, 2019 the financial institution must disclose
additional fee types based on revenue for a 24-month period that begins
no earlier than October 1, 2014. Thus, a prepaid account program that
was in existence as of April 1, 2019 must assess its additional fee
types disclosure from data collected during a consecutive 24-month
period that took place between October 1, 2014 and April 1, 2019.
For example, an existing prepaid account program was first offered
to consumers on January 1, 2012 and provides its first short form
disclosure on April 1, 2019. The earliest 24-month period from which
that financial institution could calculate its first additional fee
types disclosure would be from October 1, 2014 to September 30, 2016.
18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(2) Existing
Prepaid Account Programs as of April 1, 2019 with Unavailable Data 1. 24 month
period without available data. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(2) requires that if a financial institution does not have 24
months of fee revenue data for a particular prepaid account program
from which to calculate the additional fee types disclosure in advance
of April 1, 2019, the financial institution must disclose the additional
fee types based on revenue it reasonably anticipates the prepaid account
program will generate over the 24-month period that begins on April
1, 2019. For example, a financial institution begins offering to consumers
a prepaid account program six months before April 1, 2019. Because
the prepaid account program will not have 24 months of fee revenue
data prior to April 1, 2019, pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(2) the financial institution must disclose the additional fee
types it reasonably anticipates the prepaid account program will generate
over the 24-month period that begins on April 1, 2019. The financial
institution would take into account the data it had accumulated at
the time of its calculation to arrive at the reasonably anticipated
additional fee types for the prepaid account program.
18(b)(2)(ix)(E) Timing of Periodic Reassessment
and Update of Additional Fee Types Disclosure 18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2) Periodic Reassessment 1. Periodic
reassessment and, if applicable, update of additional fee types disclosure. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2), a financial
institution must reassess whether its previously disclosed additional
fee types continue to comply with the requirements of section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)
every 24 months based on revenue for the previous 24-month period.
The financial institution must complete this reassessment and update
its disclosure, if applicable, within three months of the end of the
24-month period, except as provided in the update printing exception
in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4). The following examples
provide guidance on the periodic assessment and, if applicable, update
of the disclosure of additional fee types pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2):
i. Reassessment with no change in the additional fee types disclosed. A financial institution disclosed two additional fee types (bill
payment and card replacement) for a particular prepaid account program
on April 1, 2019. Starting on April 1, 2021, the financial institution
assessed the fee revenue data it collected over the previous 24 months,
and the two additional fee types previously disclosed continue to
qualify as additional fee types pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix).
The financial institution is not required to take any action with regard
to the disclosure of additional fee types for that prepaid account
program.
ii. Reassessment with a change in the additional
fee types disclosed. A financial institution disclosed two additional
fee types (bill payment and card replacement) for a particular prepaid
account program on April 1, 2019. Starting on April 1, 2021, the financial
institution assessed the fee revenue data it collected over the previous
24 months, and bill payment continued to qualify as an additional
fee type pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) but check reload qualified
as the second additional fee type instead of card replacement. The
financial institution must update the additional fee types disclosure
in its short form disclosures provided electronically, orally, and
in writing (other than for printed materials that qualify for the
update printing exception in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4)) no later than July 1, 2021, which is three months after the end
of the 24-month period.
iii. Reassessment with the addition of
an additional fee type already voluntarily disclosed. A financial
institution disclosed one additional fee type (bill payment) and voluntarily
disclosed one other additional fee type (card replacement, both for
regular and expedited delivery) for a particular prepaid account program
on April 1, 2019. Starting on April 1, 2021, the financial institution
assessed the fee revenue data it collected over the previous 24 months,
and bill payment continued to qualify as an additional fee type pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) and card replacement now qualified as
the second additional fee type. Because the financial institution
already had disclosed its card replacement fees in the format required
for an additional fee type disclosure, the financial institution is
not required to take any action with regard to the additional fee
types disclosure in the short form for that prepaid account program.
2. Reassessment
more frequently than every 24 months. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2), a financial institution may, but is not required to, carry
out the reassessment and update, if applicable, more frequently than
every 24 months, at which time a new 24-month period commences. A
financial institution may choose to do this, for example, to sync
its reassessment process for additional fee types with its financial
reporting schedule or other financial analysis it performs regarding
the particular prepaid account program. If a financial institution
chooses to reassess its additional fee types disclosure more frequently
than every 24 months, it is still required to use 24 months of fee
revenue data to conduct the reassessment. For example, a financial
institution first offered a particular prepaid account program on
April 1, 2018 and thus was required to estimate its initial additional
fee types disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(D)(2). If the financial institution chooses to begin its reassessment
of its fee revenue data on April 1, 2020, it would use the data it
collected over the previous 24 months (April 1, 2018 to March 31,
2020) and complete its reassessment and its update, if applicable,
by July 1, 2020.
18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(3)
Fee Schedule Change 1. Revised prepaid account programs. Section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(3) requires that if a financial institution
revises the fee schedule for a prepaid account program, it must determine
whether it reasonably anticipates that the previously disclosed additional
fee types will continue to comply with the requirements of section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix) for the 24 months following implementation of the
fee schedule change. A fee schedule change resets the 24-month period
for assessment; a financial institution must comply with the requirements
of section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2) at the end of the 24-month
period following implementation of the fee schedule change. If the
financial institution reasonably anticipates that the previously disclosed
additional fee types will not comply with the requirements of section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix), it must update the disclosure based on its reasonable
anticipation of what those additional fee types will be at the time
the fee schedule change goes into effect, except as provided in the
update printing exception in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4). For example, if a financial institution lowers its card replacement
fee from $4 to $3 on June 1, 2019 after having first assessed its
additional fee types disclosure as of April 1, 2019, the financial
institution would assess whether it reasonably anticipates that the
existing additional fee types disclosure will continue to reflect
the additional fee types that generate the highest revenue from consumers
for that prepaid account program for the next 24 months (until June
1, 2021). If the financial institution reasonably anticipates that
its additional fee types will remain unchanged over the next 24 months,
the financial institution is not required to take any action with
regard to the additional fee types disclosure for that prepaid account
program. In the same example, if the financial institution reasonably
anticipates that the previously disclosed additional fee types will
not comply with the requirements of section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix) for
the 24 months following implementation of the fee schedule change,
the financial institution must update the listing of additional fee
types at the time the fee schedule change goes into effect, except
as provided in the update printing exception pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4).
18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4)
Update Printing Exception 1. Application of the update printing exception
to prepaid accounts sold in retail locations. Pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4), notwithstanding the requirements to
update the additional fee types disclosure in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E),
a financial institution is not required to update the listing of additional
fee types that are provided on, in, or with prepaid account packaging
materials that were manufactured, printed, or otherwise produced prior
to a periodic reassessment and update pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(2) or prior to a fee schedule change pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(3). For prepaid accounts sold in retail locations, for example,
section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4) permits a financial institution
to implement any necessary updates to the listing of the additional
fee types on the short form disclosure that appear on its physical
prepaid account packaging materials at the time the financial institution
prints new materials. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4) does
not require financial institutions to destroy existing inventory in
retail locations or elsewhere in the distribution channel, to the
extent the disclosures on such packaging materials are otherwise accurate,
to comply with this requirement. For example, a financial institution
determines that an additional fee type listed on a short form disclosure
in a retail location no longer qualifies as an additional fee type
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix). The financial institution must
update any electronic and oral short form disclosures pursuant to
the timing requirements set forth in section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E).
Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix)(E)(4), the financial
institution may continue selling any previously printed prepaid account
packages that contain the prior listing of additional fee types; prepaid
account packages printed after that time must contain the updated
listing of additional fee types.
18(b)(2)(x) Statement Regarding Overdraft Credit Features 1. Short form disclosure
when overdraft credit feature may be offered. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(x)
requires disclosure of a statement if a covered separate credit feature
accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined in Regulation
Z, 12 CFR 1026.61, may be offered at any point to a consumer in connection
with the prepaid account. This statement must be provided on the short
form disclosures for all prepaid accounts that may offer such a feature,
regardless of whether some consumers may never be solicited or qualify
to enroll in such a feature.
18(b)(2)(xi) Statement Regarding Registration and FDIC or NCUA
Insurance 1. Disclosure of FDIC or NCUA insurance. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(xi)
requires a statement regarding the prepaid account program’s eligibility
for FDIC deposit insurance or NCUA share insurance, as appropriate,
and directing the consumer to register the prepaid account for insurance
and other account protections, where applicable. If the consumer’s
prepaid account funds are held at a credit union, the disclosure must
indicate NCUA insurance eligibility. If the consumer’s prepaid account
funds are held at a financial institution other than a credit union,
the disclosure must indicate FDIC insurance eligibility.
2. Consumer identification
and verification processes. For additional guidance on the timing
of consumer identification and verification processes, and on prepaid
account programs for which there is no consumer identification and
verification process for any prepaid accounts within the prepaid account
program, see section 1005.18(e)(3) and comments 18(e)-4 through
6.
18(b)(2)(xiii) Statement
Regarding Information on All Fees and Services 1. Financial institution’s
telephone number. For a financial institution offering prepaid
accounts at a retail location pursuant to the retail location exception
in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), the statement required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii)
must also include a telephone number (and the website URL) that a
consumer may use to directly access an oral version of the long form
disclosure. To provide the long form disclosure by telephone, a financial
institution could use a live customer service agent or an interactive
voice response system. The financial institution could use a telephone
number specifically dedicated to providing the long form disclosure
or a more general customer service telephone number for the prepaid
account program. For example, a financial institution would be deemed
to provide direct access pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii) if
a consumer navigates one or two prompts to reach the oral long form
disclosure via a live customer service agent or an interactive voice
response system using either a specifically dedicated telephone number
of a more general customer service telephone number.
2. Financial institution’s website. For a financial institution offering prepaid accounts at a retail
location pursuant to the retail location exception in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii),
the statement required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii) must also include
a website URL (and a telephone number) that a consumer may use to
directly access an electronic version of the long form disclosure.
For example, a financial institution that requires a consumer to navigate
various other web pages before viewing the long form disclosure would
not be deemed to provide direct access pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii).
Trademark and product names and their commonly accepted or readily
understandable abbreviations comply with the requirement in section
1005.18(b)(2)(xiii) that the URL be meaningfully named. For example,
ABC or ABCard would be readily understandable abbreviations for a
prepaid account program named the Alpha Beta Card.
18(b)(2)(xiv) Additional Content for Payroll
Card Accounts 18(b)(2)(xiv)(A)
Statement Regarding Wage or Salary Payment Options 1. Statement options for payroll
card accounts. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(A) requires a financial
institution to include at the top of the short form disclosure for
payroll card accounts, above the information required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(i)
through (iv), one of two statements regarding wage payment options.
Financial institutions offering payroll card accounts may choose which
of the two statements required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(A) to
use in the short form disclosure. The list of other options required
in the second statement might include the following, as applicable:
Direct deposit to the consumer’s bank account, direct deposit to the
consumer’s own prepaid account, paper check, or cash. A financial
institution may, but is not required to, provide more specificity
as to whom consumers must ask or inform of their choice of wage payment
method, such as specifying the employer’s Human Resources Department.
2. Statement options for
government benefit accounts. See section 1005.15(c)(2)(i) for statement options
for government benefit accounts.
3. Statement permitted for other prepaid accounts. A financial institution offering a prepaid account other than a
payroll card account or government benefit account may, but is not
required to, include a statement in the short form disclosure regarding
payment options that is similar to either of the statements required
for payroll card accounts pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(A)
or government benefit accounts pursuant to section 1005.15(c)(2)(i).
For example, a financial institution issuing a prepaid account to
disburse student financial aid proceeds may disclose a statement such
as the following: “You have several options to receive your financial
aid payments: Direct deposit to your bank account, direct deposit
to your own prepaid card, paper check, or this prepaid card. Tell
your school which option you choose.”
18(b)(2)(xiv)(B) Statement Regarding State-Required
Information or Other Fee Discounts and Waivers 1. Statement options for state-required
information or other fee discounts or waivers. Section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(B)
permits, but does not require, a financial institution to include
in the short form disclosure for payroll card accounts one additional
line of text directing the consumer to a particular location outside
the short form disclosure for information on ways the consumer may
access payroll card account funds and balance information for free
or for a reduced fee. For example, a financial institution might include
the following line of text in the short form disclosure: “See below
for free ways to access your funds and balance information” and then
list below, but on the same page as, the short form disclosure several
ways consumers can access their prepaid account funds and balance
information for free. Alternatively, the financial institution might
direct the consumer to another location for that information, such
as by stating “See the cardholder agreement for free ways to access
your funds and balance information.” A similar statement is permitted
for government benefit accounts pursuant to section 1005.15(c)(2)(ii).
18(b)(3) Short Form Disclosure
of Variable Fees and Third-Party Fees and Prohibition on Disclosure
of Finance Charges 18(b)(3)(i) General Disclosure of Variable Fees 1. Short form disclosure
of variable fees. Section 1005.18(b)(3)(i) requires disclosure
in the short form of the highest fee when a fee can vary, followed
by a symbol, such as an asterisk, linked to a statement explaining
that the fee could be lower depending on how and where the prepaid
account is used. For example, a financial institution provides interactive
voice response (IVR) customer service for free and provides the first
three live agent customer service calls per month for free, after
which it charges $0.50 for each additional live agent customer service
call during that month. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(vi), the
financial institution must disclose both its IVR and live agent customer
service fees on the short form disclosure. The financial institution
would disclose the IVR fee as $0 and the live agent customer service
fee as $0.50, followed by an asterisk (or other symbol) linked to
a statement explaining that the fee can be lower depending on how
and where the prepaid account is used. Except as described in section
1005.18(b)(3)(ii), section 1005.18(b)(3)(i) does not permit a financial
institution to describe in the short form disclosure the specific
conditions under which a fee may be reduced or waived, but the financial
institution could use, for example, any other part of the prepaid
account’s packaging or other printed materials to disclose that information.
The conditions under which a fee may be lower are required to be disclosed
in the long form disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii).
18(b)(3)(ii) Disclosure of Variable
Periodic Fee 1. Periodic fee variation alternative. If the amount of the periodic
fee disclosed in the short form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(i)
could vary, a financial institution has two alternatives for disclosing
the variation, as set forth in section 1005.18(b)(3)(i) and (ii).
For example, a financial institution charges a monthly fee of $4.95,
but waives this fee if a consumer receives direct deposit into the
prepaid account or conducts 30 or more transactions during that month.
Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(3)(ii), the financial institution could
list its monthly fee of $4.95 on the short form disclosure followed
by a dagger symbol that links to a statement that states, for example,
“No monthly fee with direct deposit or 30 transactions per month.”
This statement may take up no more than one line of text in the short
form disclosure and must be located directly above or in place of
the linked statement required by section 1005.18(b)(3)(i). Alternatively,
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(3)(i), the financial institution could
list its monthly fee of $4.95 on the short form disclosure followed
by an asterisk that links to a statement that states, “This fee can
be lower depending on how and where this card is used.”
18(b)(3)(iii) Single Disclosure for Like
Fees 1. Alternative
for two-tier fees in the short form disclosure. Pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(3)(iii), a financial institution may opt to disclose one
fee instead of the two fees required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii),
(v), and (vi) and any two-tier fee required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(ix),
when the amount is the same for both fees. The following examples
illustrate how to provide a single disclosure for like fees on both
the short form disclosure and the multiple service plan short form
disclosure:
i. A financial institution
charges $1 for both in-network and out-of-network automated teller
machine withdrawals in the United States. The financial institution
may list the $1 fee once under the general heading “ATM withdrawal”
required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii); in that case, it need not
disclose the terms “in-network” or “out-of-network.”
ii. A financial institution using the multiple
service plan short form disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2) charges $1 under each of its service plans for both in-network
and out-of-network automated teller machine withdrawals in the United
States. The financial institution may disclose the ATM withdrawal
fee on one line, instead of two, using the general heading “ATM withdrawal”
required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iii); in that case, it need not
disclose the terms “in-network” or “out-of-network.”
18(b)(3)(iv) Third-Party Fees
in General 1. General prohibition on disclosure of third-party fees in the short
form. Section 1005.18(b)(3)(iv) states that a financial institution
may not include any third-party fees in a disclosure made pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(2), except for, as provided by section 1005.18(b)(3)(v),
the cash reload fee required to be disclosed by section 1005.18(b)(2)(iv).
Fees imposed by another party, such as a program manager, for services
performed on behalf of the financial institution are not third-party
fees and therefore must be disclosed pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(3)(iv).
For example, if a program manager performs customer service functions
for a financial institution’s prepaid account program, and charges
a fee for live agent customer service, that fee must be disclosed
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(iv).
18(b)(3)(v) Third-Party Cash Reload Fees 1. Updating
third-party fees. Section 1005.18(b)(3)(v) provides that a financial
institution is not required to revise its short form disclosure to
reflect a cash reload fee change by a third party until such time
that the financial institution manufactures, prints, or otherwise
produces new prepaid account packaging materials or otherwise updates
the short form disclosure. For example, at the time a financial institution
first prints packaging material for its prepaid account program, it
discloses on the short form the $3.99 fee charged by the third-party
reload network with which it contracts to provide cash reloads.
Ten months later, the third-party reload network raises its cash reload
fee to $4.25. The financial institution is not required to update
its on-package disclosures to reflect the change in the cash reload
fee until the financial institution next prints packaging materials
for that prepaid account program. With respect to that financial institution’s
electronic and oral disclosures for that prepaid account program,
the financial institution may, but is not required to, update its
short form disclosure immediately upon learning of the third-party
reload network’s change to its cash reload fee. Alternatively, the
financial institution may wait to update its electronic and oral short
form disclosures to reflect the change in the cash reload fee until
it otherwise updates those disclosures.
18(b)(3)(vi) Prohibition on Disclosure of
Finance Charges 1. No disclosure of finance charges in the short
form. Section 1005.18(b)(3)(vi) provides that a financial institution
may not include in a disclosure made pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(i)
through (ix) any finance charges as described in Regulation Z, 12
CFR 1026.4(b)(11), imposed in connection with a covered separate credit
feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined in 12
CFR 1026.61. If a financial institution imposes a higher fee or charge
on the asset feature of a prepaid account with a covered separate
credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card than the
amount of a comparable fee or charge it imposes on any prepaid account
in the same prepaid account program that does not have such a credit
feature, it must disclose on the short form for purposes of section
1005.18(b)(2)(i) through (vii) and (ix) the amount of the comparable
fee rather than the higher fee. See, e.g., section 1005.18(g)(2)
and related commentary.
18(b)(4)
Long Form Disclosure Content 18(b)(4)(ii) Fees 1. Disclosure of all fees. Section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii) requires a financial institution to disclose
in the long form all fees that may be imposed in connection with a
prepaid account, not just fees for electronic fund transfers or the
right to make transfers. The requirement to disclose all fees in the
long form includes any finance charges imposed on the prepaid account
as described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11)(ii), in connection
with a covered separate credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit
card as defined in 12 CFR 1026.61 but does not include finance charges
imposed on the covered separate credit feature as described in 12
CFR 1026.4(b)(11)(i). See comment 18(b)(7)(i)(B)-2 for guidance
on disclosure of finance charges as part of the section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii)
fee disclosure in the long form. A financial institution may also
be required to include finance charges in the Regulation Z disclosures
required pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(vii).
2. Disclosure of conditions. Section
1005.18(b)(4)(ii) requires a financial institution to disclose the
amount of each fee and the conditions, if any, under which the fee
may be imposed, waived, or reduced. For example, if a financial institution
charges a cash reload fee, the financial institution must list the
amount of the cash reload fee and also specify any circumstances under
which a consumer can qualify for a lower fee. Similarly, if a financial
institution discloses both a periodic fee and an inactivity fee, it
must indicate whether the inactivity fee will be charged in addition
to, or instead of, the periodic fee. A financial institution may,
but is not required to, also include on the long form disclosure additional
information or limitations related to the service or feature for which
a fee is charged, such as, for cash reloads, any limit on the amount
of cash a consumer may load into the prepaid account in a single transaction
or during a particular time period. The general requirement in section
1005.18(b)(4)(ii) does not apply to individual fee waivers or reductions
granted to a particular consumer or group of consumers on a discretionary
or case-by-case basis.
3. Disclosure of a service or feature without a charge. Pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii), a financial institution may, but is not required
to, list in the long form disclosure any service or feature it provides
or offers at no charge to the consumer. For example, a financial institution
may list “online bill pay” in its long form disclosure and indicate
a fee amount of “$0” when the financial institution does not charge
consumers a fee for that feature. By contrast, where a fee is waived
or reduced under certain circumstances or where a service or feature
is available for an introductory period without a fee, the financial
institution may not list the fee amount as “$0”. Rather, the financial
institution must list the highest fee, accompanied by an explanation
of the waived or reduced fee amount and any conditions for the waiver
or discount. For example, if a financial institution waives its monthly
fee for any consumer who receives direct deposit payments into the
prepaid account or conducts 30 or more transactions in a given month,
the long form disclosure must list the regular monthly fee amount
along with an explanation that the monthly fee is waived if the consumer
receives direct deposit or conducts 30 or more transactions each month.
Similarly, for an introductory fee, the financial institution would
list the highest fee, and explain the introductory fee amount, the
duration of the introductory period, and any conditions that apply
during the introductory period.
4. Third-party fees. Section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii)
requires disclosure in the long form of any third-party fee amounts
known to the financial institution that may apply. Fees imposed by
another party, such as a program manager, for services performed on
behalf of the financial institution are not third-party fees and therefore
must be disclosed on the long form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii).
Also pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii), for any third-party fee
disclosed, a financial institution may, but is not required to, include
either or both a statement that the fee is accurate as of or through
a specific date or that the third-party fee is subject to change.
For example, a financial institution that contracts with a third-party
remote deposit capture service must include in the long form disclosure
the amount of the fee known to the financial institution that is charged
by the third party for remote deposit capture services. The financial
institution may, but is not required to, also state that the third-party
remote deposit capture fee is accurate as of or through a specific
date, such as the date the financial institution prints the long form
disclosure. The financial institution may also state that the fee
is subject to change. Section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii) also provides that,
if a third-party fee may apply but the amount of the fee is not known
by the financial institution, it must include a statement indicating
that a third-party fee may apply without specifying the fee amount.
For example, a financial institution that permits out-of-network ATM
withdrawals would disclose that, for ATM withdrawals that occur outside
the financial institution’s network, the ATM operator may charge the
consumer a fee for the withdrawal, but the financial institution is
not required to disclose the out-of-network ATM operator’s fee amount
if it does not know the amount of the fee.
18(b)(4)(iii) Statement Regarding Registration
and FDIC or NCUA Insurance 1. Statement regarding registration and FDIC or
NCUA insurance, including implications thereof. Section 1005.18(b)(4)(iii)
requires that the long form disclosure include the same statement
regarding prepaid account registration and FDIC or NCUA insurance
eligibility required by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xi) in the short form
disclosure, together with an explanation of FDIC or NCUA insurance
coverage and the benefit of such coverage or the consequence of the
lack of such coverage, as applicable.
i. Bank disclosure
of FDIC insurance. For example, XYZ Bank offers a prepaid account
program for sale at retail locations that is set up to be eligible
for FDIC deposit insurance, but does not conduct consumer identification
and verification before consumers purchase the prepaid account. XYZ
Bank may disclose the required statements as “Register your card for
FDIC insurance eligibility and other protections. Your funds will
be held at or transferred to XYZ Bank, an FDIC-insured institution. Once
there, your funds are insuredup to $250,000 by the FDIC in the event
XYZ Bank fails, if specific deposit insurance requirements are met
and your card is registered. See fdic.gov/deposit/deposits/prepaid.html
for details.” Conversely, if XYZ Bank offers another prepaid account
program for sale at retail locations for which it conducts consumer
identification and verification after purchase of the prepaid account,
but the program is not set up to be eligible for FDIC insurance, XYZ
Bank may disclose the required statements as “Not FDIC insured. Your
funds will be held at or transferred to XYZ Bank. If XYZ Bank fails,
you are not protected by FDIC deposit insurance and could lose some
or all of your money. Register your card for other protections.”
ii. Credit union disclosure of NCUA insurance. For example, ABC Credit Union offers a prepaid account program for
sale at its own branches that is set up to be eligible for NCUA share
insurance, but does not conduct consumer identification and verification
before consumers purchase the prepaid account. ABC Credit Union may
disclose the requirement statements as “Register your card for NCUA
insurance, if eligible, and other protections. Your funds will be
held at or transferred to ABC Credit Union, an NCUA-insured institution.
Once there, if specific share insurance requirements are met and your
card is registered, your funds are insured up to $250,000 by the NCUA
in the event ABC Credit Union fails.” See comment 18(b)(2)(xi)-1
for guidance as to when NCUA insurance coverage should be disclosed
instead of FDIC insurance coverage.
18(b)(4)(vii) Regulation Z Disclosures for
Overdraft Credit Features 1. Long form Regulation Z disclosure of overdraft
credit features. Section 1005.18(b)(4)(vii) requires that the
long form include the disclosures described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR
1026.60(e)(1), in accordance with the requirements for such disclosures
in 12 CFR 1026.60, if, at any point, a covered separate credit feature
accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card as defined in Regulation
Z, 12 CFR 1026.61, may be offered to a consumer in connection with
the prepaid account. If the financial institution includes the disclosures
described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.60(e)(1), pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(7)(i)(B), such disclosures must appear below the statements
required by section 1005.18(b)(4)(vi). If the disclosures provided
pursuant to Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.60(e)(1), are provided in writing,
these disclosures must be provided in the form required by 12 CFR
1026.60(a)(2), and to the extent possible, on the same page as the
other disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)(4).
2. Updates to the long form for changes
to the Regulation Z disclosures. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(vii),
a financial institution is not required to revise the disclosure required
by that paragraph to reflect a change in the fees or other terms disclosed
therein until such time as the financial institution manufactures,
prints, or otherwise produces new prepaid account packaging materials
or otherwise updates the long form disclosure. This exception does
not extend to any finance charges imposed on the prepaid account as
described in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11)(ii), in connection
with a covered separate credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit
card as defined in 12 CFR 1026.61 that are required to be disclosed
on the long form pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii). See comment 18(b)(4)(ii)-1.
18(b)(5) Disclosure Requirements Outside the Short Form Disclosure 1. Content of
disclosure. Section 1005.18(b)(5) requires that the name of the
financial institution, the name of the prepaid account program, and
any purchase price or activation fee for the prepaid account be disclosed
outside the short form disclosure. A financial institution may, but
is not required to, also disclose the name of the program manager
or other service provider involved in the prepaid account program.
2. Location of disclosure. In addition to setting forth the required content for disclosures outside
the short form disclosure, section 1005.18(b)(5) requires that, in
a setting other than a retail location, the information required by
section 1005.18(b)(5) must be disclosed in close proximity to the
short form. For example, if the financial institution provides the
short form disclosure online, the information required by section
1005.18(b)(5) is deemed disclosed in close proximity to the short
form if it appears on the same web page as the short form disclosure.
If the financial institution offers the prepaid account in its own
branch locations and provides the short form disclosure on the exterior
of its preprinted packaging materials, the information required by
section 1005.18(b)(5) is deemed disclosed in close proximity to the
short form disclosure if it appears on the exterior of the packaging.
If the financial institution provides a written short form disclosure
in a manner other than on preprinted packaging materials, such as
on paper, the information required by section 1005.18(b)(5) is deemed
disclosed in close proximity if it appears on the same piece of paper
as the short form disclosure. If the financial institution provides
the short form disclosure orally, the information required by section
1005.18(b)(5) is deemed disclosed in close proximity to the short
form disclosure if it is provided immediately before or after disclosing
the fees and information required pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2).
For prepaid accounts sold in a retail location pursuant to the retail
location exception in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), section 1005.18(b)(5)
requires the information other than purchase price be disclosed on
the exterior of the access device’s packaging material. If the purchase
price, if any, is not also disclosed on the exterior of the packaging,
disclosure of the purchase price on or near the sales rack or display
for the packaging material is deemed in close proximity to the access
device’s packaging material.
18(b)(6) Form of Pre-Acquisition Disclosures 18(b)(6)(i) General 1. Written pre-acquisition disclosures. If a financial institution provides the disclosures required by
section 1005.18(b) in written form prior to acquisition pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(1)(i), they need not also be provided electronically
or orally. For example, an employer distributes to new employees printed
copies of the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b) for a payroll
card account, together with instructions to complete the payroll card
account acquisition process online if the employee wishes to be paid
via a payroll card account. The financial institution is not required
to provide the section 1005.18(b) disclosures electronically via the
website because the consumer has already received the disclosures
pre-acquisition in written form.
18(b)(6)(i)(B) Electronic Disclosures 1. Providing pre-acquisition disclosures
electronically. Unless provided in written form prior to acquisition
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(1)(i), section 1005.18(b)(6)(i)(B)
requires electronic delivery of the disclosures required by section
1005.18(b) when a consumer acquires a prepaid account through electronic
means, including via a website or mobile application, and, among other
things, in a manner which is reasonably expected to be accessible
in light of how a consumer is acquiring the prepaid account. For example,
if a consumer is acquiring a prepaid account via a website or mobile
application, it would be reasonable to expect that a consumer would
be able to access the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b) on
the first page or via a direct link from the first page of the website
or mobile application or on the first page that discloses the details
about the specific prepaid account program. See comment 18(b)(1)(i)-2
for additional guidance on placement of the short form and long form
disclosures on a web page.
2. Disclosures responsive to smaller screens. In accordance with the requirement in section 1005.18(b)(6)(i)(B)
that electronic disclosures be provided in a responsive form, electronic
disclosures provided pursuant to section 1005.18(b) must be provided
in a way that responds to different screen sizes, for example, by
stacking elements of the disclosures in a manner that accommodates
consumer viewing on smaller screens, while still meeting the other
formatting requirements set forth in section 1005.18(b)(7). For example,
the disclosures permitted by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(B) or (b)(3)(ii)
must take up no more than one additional line of text in the short
form disclosure. If a consumer is acquiring a prepaid account using
a mobile device with a screen too small to accommodate these disclosures
on one line of text in accordance with the size requirements set forth
in section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii)(B), a financial institution is permitted
to display the disclosures permitted by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiv)(B)
and (b)(3)(ii), for example, by stacking those disclosures in a way
that responds to smaller screen sizes, while still meeting the other
formatting requirements in section 1005.18(b)(7).
3. Machine-readable text. Section
1005.18(b)(6)(i)(B) requires that electronic disclosures must be provided
using machine-readable text that is accessible via both Web browsers
(or mobile applications, as applicable) and screen readers. A disclosure
would not be deemed to comply with this requirement if it was not
provided in a form that can be read automatically by internet search
engines or other computer systems.
18(b)(6)(i)(C) Oral Disclosures 1. Disclosures for prepaid accounts acquired
by telephone. Unless it provides disclosures in written form
prior to acquisition pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(1)(i), a financial
institution must disclose the information required by section 1005.18(b)(2)
and (5) orally before a consumer acquires a prepaid account orally
by telephone pursuant to the exception in section 1005.18(b)(1)(iii).
A financial institution may, for example, provide these disclosures
by using an interactive voice response or similar system or by using
a customer service agent, after the consumer has initiated the purchase
of a prepaid account by telephone, but before the consumer acquires
the prepaid account. In addition, a financial institution must provide
the initial disclosures required by section 1005.7, as modified by
section 1005.18(f)(1), before the first electronic fund transfer is
made involving the prepaid account.
18(b)(6)(ii) Retainable Form 1. Retainable disclosures. Section 1005.18(b)(6)(ii)
requires that, except for disclosures provided orally pursuant to
section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii) or (iii), long form disclosures provided
via SMS as permitted by section 1005.18(b)(2)(xiii) for a prepaid
account sold at retail locations pursuant to the retail location exception
in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii), and the disclosure of a purchase price
pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(5) that is not disclosed on the exterior
of the packaging material for a prepaid account sold at a retail location
pursuant to the retail location exception in section 1005.18(b)(1)(ii),
disclosures provided pursuant to section 1005.18(b) must be made in
a form that a consumer may keep. For example, a short form disclosure
with a tear strip running though it would not be deemed retainable
because use of the tear strip to gain access to the prepaid account
access device inside the packaging would destroy part of the short
form disclosure. Electronic disclosures are deemed retainable if the
consumer is able to print, save, and email the disclosures from the
Web site or mobile application on which they are displayed.
18(b)(6)(iii) Tabular Format 18(b)(6)(iii)(B) Multiple Service
Plans 18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(1)
Short Form Disclosure for Default Service Plan 1. Disclosure of default service
plan excludes short-term or promotional service plans. Section
1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(1) provides that when a financial institution
offers multiple service plans within a particular prepaid account
program and each plan has a different fee schedule, the information
required by final section 1005.18(b)(2)(i) through (ix) may be provided
in the tabular format described in final section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(A)
for the service plan in which a consumer is initially enrolled by
default upon acquiring a prepaid account. Pursuant to the requirement
in section 1005.18(b)(3)(i) to disclose the highest amount a financial
institution may impose for a fee disclosed pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2)(i)
through (vii) and (ix), a financial institution would not be permitted
to disclose any short-term or promotional service plans as a default
service plan.
18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2)
Short Form Disclosure for Multiple Service Plans 1. Disclosure of multiple service
plans. The multiple service plan disclosure requirements in section
1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2) apply when a financial institution
offers more than one service plan within a particular prepaid account
program, each plan has a different fee schedule, and the financial
institution opts not to disclose the default service plan pursuant
to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(1). See Model Form
A-10(e). For example, a financial institution that offers a prepaid
account program with one service plan for which a consumer pays no
periodic fee but instead pays a fee for each transaction, and another
plan that includes a monthly fee but no per transaction fee may use
the short form disclosure for multiple service plans pursuant to section
1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2). Similarly, a financial institution
that offers a prepaid account program with preferred rates or fees
for the prepaid accounts of consumers who also use another non-prepaid
service (e.g., a mobile phone service), often referred to as “loyalty
plans,” may also use the short form disclosure for multiple service
plans pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(6)(iii)(B)(2). Pricing
variations based on whether a consumer elects to use a specific feature
of a prepaid account, such as waiver of the monthly fee for consumers
electing to receive direct deposit, does not constitute multiple service
plans or a loyalty plan. See comment 18(b)(3)(iii)-1.ii for
guidance on providing a single disclosure for like fees for multiple
service plan short form disclosures.
18(b)(7) Specific Formatting Requirements
for Pre-Acquisition Disclosures 18(b)(7)(i) Grouping 18(b)(7)(i)(B) Long Form Disclosure 1. Conditions must be in
close proximity to fee amount. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii),
the long form disclosure generally must disclose all fees that may
be imposed in connection with a prepaid account, including the amount
of the fee and any conditions under which the fee may be imposed,
waived, or reduced. Pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(7)(i)(B), text
describing the conditions under which a fee may be imposed must appear
in the table in the long form disclosure in close proximity to the
fee amount disclosed pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii). For example,
a financial institution is deemed to comply with this requirement
if the text describing the conditions is located directly to the right
of the fee amount in the long form disclosure, as illustrated in Sample
Form A-10(f). See comment 18(b)(6)(i)(B)-2 regarding stacking
of electronic disclosures for display on smaller screen sizes.
2. Category of function
for finance charges. Section 1005.18(b)(7)(i)(B) requires that
the information required by section 1005.18(b)(4)(ii) must be generally
grouped together and organized under subheadings by the categories
of function for which a financial institution may impose the fee.
If any finance charges may be imposed on the prepaid account as described
in Regulation Z, 12 CFR 1026.4(b)(11)(ii), in connection with a covered
separate credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit card
as defined in 12 CFR 1026.61, the financial institution may, but is
not required to, group all finance charges together under a single
subheading. This includes situations where the financial institution
imposes a higher fee or charge on the asset feature of a prepaid account
with a covered separate credit feature accessible by a hybrid prepaid-credit
card than the amount of a comparable fee or charge it imposes on
any prepaid account in the same prepaid account program that does
not have such a credit feature. For example, if a financial institution
charges on the prepaid account a $0.50 per transaction fee for each
transaction that accesses funds in the asset feature of a prepaid
account and a $1.25 per transaction fee for each transaction where
the hybrid prepaid-credit card accesses credit from the covered separate
credit feature in the course of the transaction, the financial institution
is permitted to disclose the $0.50 per transaction fee under a general
transactional subheading and disclose the additional $0.75 per transaction
fee under a separate subheading together with any other finance charges
that may be imposed on the prepaid account.
18(b)(7)(ii) Prominence and Size 1. Minimum type size. Section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii) sets forth minimum point/pixel size requirements
for each element of the disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)(2),
(b)(3)(i) and (ii), and (b)(4). A financial institution may provide
disclosures in a type size larger than the required minimum to enhance
consumer comprehension in any acquisition scenario, as long as the
financial institution complies with the point/pixel size hierarchy
set forth in section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii).
2. “Point” refers to printed disclosures and “pixel”
refers to electronic disclosures. References in section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii)
to “point” size correspond to printed disclosures and references to
“pixel” size correspond to disclosures provided via electronic means.
18(b)(7)(ii)(A) General 1. Contrast required between
type color and background of disclosures. Section section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii)(A)
requires that all text used to disclose information in the short form
or in the long form disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(2),
(b)(3)(i) and (ii), and (b)(4) must be in a single, easy-to-read type
that is all black or one color and printed on a background that provides
a clear contrast. A financial institution complies with the color
requirements if, for example, it provides the disclosures required
by section 1005.18(b)(2), (b)(3)(i) and (ii), and (b)(4) printed in
black type on a white background or white type on a black background.
Also, pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(7)(ii)(A), the type and color
may differ between the short form disclosure and the long form disclosure
provided for a particular prepaid account program. For example, a
financial institution may use one font/type style for the short form
disclosure for a particular prepaid account program and use a different
font/type style for the long form disclosure for that same prepaid
account program. Similarly, a financial institution may use black
type for the short form disclosure for a particular prepaid account
program and use blue type for the long form disclosure for that same
prepaid account program.
18(b)(7)(iii)
Segregation 1. Permitted information outside the short form and long form disclosures. Section 1005.18(b)(7)(iii) requires that the short form and long
form disclosures required by section 1005.18(b)(2) and (4) be segregated
from other information and contain only information that is required
or permitted for those disclosures by section 1005.18(b). This segregation
requirement does not prohibit the financial institution from providing
information elsewhere on the same page as the short form disclosure,
such as the information required by section 1005.18(b)(5), additional
disclosures required by state law for payroll card accounts, or any
other information the financial institution wishes to provide about
the prepaid account. Similarly, the segregation requirement does not
prohibit a financial institution from providing the long form disclosure
on the same page as other disclosures or information, or as part of
a larger document, such as the prepaid account agreement. See also section 1005.18(b)(1) and (f)(1).
18(b)(8) Terminology of Pre-Acquisition Disclosures 1. Consistent terminology. Section 1005.18(b)(8) requires that fee names and other
terms be used consistently within and across the disclosures required
by section 1005.18(b). For example, a financial institution may not
name the fee required to be disclosed by section 1005.18(b)(2)(vii)
an “inactivity fee” in the short form disclosure and a “dormancy fee”
in the long form disclosure. However, a financial institution may
substitute the term prepaid “account” for the term prepaid “card,”
as appropriate, wherever it is used in section 1005.18(b).
18(b)(9) Prepaid Accounts Acquired in Foreign
Languages 1. Prepaid accounts acquired in foreign languages. Section 1005.18(b)(9)(i)
requires a financial institution to provide the pre-acquisition disclosures
required by section 1005.18(b) in a foreign language in certain circumstances.
i. Examples of
situations in which foreign language disclosures are required. The following examples illustrate situations in which a financial
institution must provide the pre-acquisition disclosures in a foreign
language in connection with the acquisition of that prepaid account:
A. The financial institution principally uses a foreign language
on the packaging material of a prepaid account sold in a retail location
or distributed at a bank or credit union branch, even though a few
words appear in English on the packaging.
B. The financial institution principally
uses a foreign language in a television advertisement for a prepaid
account. That advertisement includes a telephone number a consumer
can call to acquire the prepaid account, whether by speaking to a
customer service representative or interacting with an interactive
voice response (IVR) system.
C. The financial institution principally
uses a foreign language in an online advertisement for a prepaid account.
That advertisement includes a website URL through which a consumer
can acquire the prepaid account.
D. The financial institution principally
uses a foreign language on a printed advertisement for a prepaid account.
That advertisement includes a telephone number or a website URL a
consumer can call or visit to acquire the prepaid account. The pre-acquisition
disclosures must be provided to the consumer in that same foreign
language prior to the consumer acquiring the prepaid account.
E. The financial institution
does not principally use a foreign language on prepaid account packaging
material nor does it principally use a foreign language to advertise,
solicit, or market a prepaid account. A consumer calls the financial
institution and has the option to proceed with the prepaid account
acquisition process in a foreign language, whether by speaking to
a customer service representative or interacting with an IVR system.
(But see section 1005.18(b)(9)(i)(C), which limits the obligation
to provide foreign language disclosures for payroll card accounts
and government benefit accounts acquired orally by telephone in certain
circumstances.)
F.
The financial institution does not principally use a foreign language
on prepaid account packaging material nor does it principally use
a foreign language to advertise, solicit, or market a prepaid account.
A consumer visits the financial institution’s website. On that website,
the consumer has the option to proceed with the prepaid account acquisition
process in a foreign language.
ii. Examples
of situations in which foreign language disclosures are not required. The following examples illustrate situations in which a financial
institution is not required to provide the pre-acquisition disclosures
in a foreign language:
A. A consumer visits the financial institution’s
branch location in person and speaks to an employee in a foreign language
about acquiring a prepaid account. The consumer proceeds with the
acquisition process in that foreign language.
B. The financial institution does not
principally use a foreign language on prepaid account packaging material
nor does it principally use a foreign language to advertise, solicit,
or market a prepaid account. A consumer calls the financial institution’s
customer service line and speaks to a customer service representative
in a foreign language. However, if the customer service representative
proceeds with the prepaid account acquisition process over the telephone,
the financial institution would be required to provide the pre-acquisition
disclosures in that foreign language. (But see section 1005.18(b)(9)(i)(C),
which limits the obligation to provide foreign language disclosures
for payroll card accounts and government benefit accounts acquired
orally by telephone in certain circumstances.)
C. The financial institution principally
uses a foreign language in an advertisement for a prepaid account.
That advertisement includes a telephone number a consumer can call
to acquire the prepaid account. The consumer calls the telephone number
provided on the advertisement and has the option to proceed with the
prepaid account acquisition process in English or in a foreign language.
The consumer chooses to proceed with the acquisition process in English.
D. A consumer calls
a government agency to enroll in a government benefits program. The
government agency does not offer through its telephone system an option
for consumers to proceed in a foreign language. An employee of the
government agency assists the consumer with the enrollment process,
including helping the consumer acquire a government benefits account.
The employee also happens to speak the foreign language in which the
consumer is most comfortable communicating, and chooses to communicate
with the consumer in that language to facilitate the enrollment process.
In this case, the employee offered language interpretation assistance
on an informal or ad hoc basis to accommodate the prospective government
benefits account holder.
2. Principally used. All relevant
facts and circumstances determine whether a foreign language is principally
used by the financial institution to advertise, solicit, or market
under section 1005.18(b)(9). Whether a foreign language is principally
used is determined at the packaging material, advertisement, solicitation,
or marketing communication level, not at the prepaid account program
level or across the financial institution’s activities as a whole.
A financial institution that advertises a prepaid account program
in multiple languages would evaluate its use of foreign language in
each advertisement to determine whether it has principally used a
foreign language therein.
3. Advertise, solicit, or market a prepaid account. Any commercial message, appearing in any medium, that promotes directly
or indirectly the availability of prepaid accounts constitutes advertising,
soliciting, or marketing for purposes of section 1005.18(b)(9). Examples
illustrating advertising, soliciting, or marketing include, but are
not limited to:
i. Messages in a leaflet, promotional flyer,
newspaper, or magazine.
ii. Electronic messages, such as on a website or mobile application.
iii. Telephone solicitations.
iv. Solicitations sent
to the consumer by mail or email.
v. Television or radio commercials.
4. Information
in the long form disclosure in English. Section 1005.18(b)(9)(ii)
states that a financial institution required to provide pre-acquisition
disclosures in a foreign language pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(9)(i)
must also provide the information required to be disclosed in its
pre-acquisition long form disclosure pursuant to section 1005.18(b)(4)
in English upon a consumer’s request and on any part of the website
where it discloses this information in a foreign language. A financial
institution may, but is not required to, provide the English version
of the information required by section 1005.18(b)(4) in accordance
with the formatting, grouping, size and other requirements set forth
in section 1005.18(b) for the long form disclosure.