7 min read

Questions to Ask Before Opening a Business Bank Account

Before you open a business bank account, ask these questions about fees, minimum balances, transaction limits, FDIC insurance, and online banking tools — so you pick the right account for how your business actually runs.

Bizee Brand

Bizee Editorial Staff

Editorial Team

RELATED CONTENT
Trustpilot
Excellent 4.7 out of 5

Introduction

Before opening a business bank account, ask about monthly fees, minimum balance requirements, transaction limits, lending options, FDIC insurance coverage, and online banking tools. Every business runs differently, and the account that works for a freelancer won't necessarily work for a product-based business with high cash volume.

What type of account do you actually need?

Start by figuring out which account types your business actually needs. Most banks offer checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts, and merchant services — but not every business needs all of them. A service business that invoices clients monthly has different needs than a retail business handling daily cash deposits.

Ask the bank which account types are available and what each one is designed for. The answer tells you whether the bank understands small business banking or is just offering you a personal account with a different label.

  • Business checking — for day-to-day transactions, payroll, and vendor payments
  • Business savings — for setting aside tax reserves or an emergency fund
  • Money market account — for earning interest on larger cash balances
  • Merchant services account — for accepting credit and debit card payments

What does it cost to keep the account open?

Fee structures vary more than most people expect, and the monthly maintenance fee is only one piece. Ask for the full fee schedule before you open anything. Minimum balance requirements to avoid fees typically range from $1,000 to $25,000 depending on the bank and account type, and falling below that threshold can trigger charges that add up fast.

Beyond the monthly fee, ask specifically about wire transfer fees ($15–$50 for outgoing domestic wires is common), overdraft fees ($30–$35 per item at many banks), cash deposit fees after a free monthly allowance, and out-of-network ATM fees. These are the charges that catch new business owners off guard.

Also ask whether the bank offers linked-service discounts. Some banks reduce or waive fees when you hold multiple accounts or use their payroll or merchant services. It's worth asking even if you don't need those services yet.

Are there limits on how you use the account?

Some business accounts cap the number of transactions per month or charge extra fees above a set threshold. This matters more than it sounds. A business processing dozens of vendor payments or customer refunds each month can hit a transaction cap without realizing it — and the overage fees add up.

Ask whether the account has a monthly transaction limit and what the fee is for going over it. Also ask about minimum transaction amounts on savings or money market accounts — some charge extra for transactions below a set dollar amount. Cash deposit limits are worth asking about too, especially if your business handles physical cash regularly. Many banks offer a free monthly cash deposit allowance, typically $5,000–$20,000, with fees applied after that.

What lending and credit options does the bank offer?

Not every business needs a loan on day one, but knowing what's available at your bank before you need it is worth the conversation. Ask whether the bank offers business lines of credit, short-term loans, or SBA loan programs — and what the qualification requirements look like.

If you're early in building business credit, your personal credit score will factor into most lending decisions until your business has its own credit history. Ask the bank how they evaluate new businesses for credit products. Some banks are more willing to work with newer businesses than others, and finding that out before you open an account saves time later.

Also ask whether the bank offers a business credit card. Having a card tied to your business account makes it easier to track expenses and start building a credit profile under your business's name.

How does the bank protect your deposits?

Ask whether the bank is FDIC-insured. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insures deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, for each account ownership category. For a business account owned by a corporation, partnership, or LLC, that $250,000 limit applies to the business as its own ownership category — separate from any personal accounts you hold at the same bank.

If you're banking with a credit union instead of a bank, ask about NCUA coverage — the National Credit Union Administration provides equivalent share insurance up to $250,000. Most business owners don't think about deposit insurance until they need it. Checking this upfront takes about 30 seconds and is worth doing.

What do the online and mobile banking tools actually do?

Ask for a walkthrough of the bank's online and mobile banking tools before you open an account. The quality of these tools varies more than the fee schedule does, and you'll use them every week. Find out whether you can pay bills, send wire transfers, set up ACH payments, and add employee access — all from the online portal.

Ask specifically whether the platform integrates with accounting software like QuickBooks or Xero. If it does, your transactions can sync automatically instead of requiring manual entry. That's a real time saver once your transaction volume picks up.

Also ask about mobile check deposit limits and availability windows. Some banks make deposited funds available the same day; others hold them for 1–2 business days. If your business depends on fast access to deposited checks, that timeline matters.

FAQ

Ask about monthly fees, minimum balance requirements to avoid those fees, transaction limits, wire transfer fees, cash deposit allowances, and whether the account earns interest. Also ask about lending options, FDIC insurance coverage, and what the online banking tools can do. The goal is to understand the full cost of the account and whether it fits how your business actually runs — not just whether you can open one.

Know your expected monthly transaction volume, average account balance, and whether you'll need lending access in the near term. Banks use these factors to match you to the right account type. You'll also need your business formation documents, Employer Identification Number (EIN), and a government-issued ID to open the account. If your business is an LLC or corporation, bring your Articles of Organization or Articles of Incorporation as well.

Look for low or waivable monthly fees, a minimum balance requirement you can realistically maintain, transaction limits that fit your volume, and online banking tools that work with your accounting software. FDIC insurance is non-negotiable — confirm the bank is insured before you open anything. Beyond the basics, look at whether the bank offers business credit products and how responsive their support is. A bank that's hard to reach when something goes wrong is a real problem.

Ask about the interest rate, minimum balance to earn that rate, and whether there are limits on monthly withdrawals or transfers. Some savings and money market accounts charge extra for transactions below a set dollar amount or cap the number of withdrawals per month. Also ask whether the savings account is FDIC-insured and whether it can be linked to your business checking account for easy transfers.

Common fees include a monthly maintenance fee (often waivable if you maintain a minimum balance), wire transfer fees of $15–$50 for outgoing domestic wires, overdraft fees of $30–$35 per item, and cash deposit fees once you exceed the free monthly allowance. Out-of-network ATM fees typically run $2–$5 per transaction on top of any surcharge from the ATM owner. Ask for the full fee schedule in writing before you open the account.

It depends on the bank. If the bank is FDIC-insured, your business deposits are covered up to $250,000 per insured bank, per ownership category. A business account owned by a corporation, LLC, or partnership is treated as its own ownership category — separate from any personal accounts you hold at the same bank. Credit unions offer equivalent coverage through the NCUA instead of the FDIC. Always confirm the bank's insurance status before opening an account.