Comparing big-bank checking to a member-bundled bank? Here’s how RMO Bank’s MyEveryday Checking stacks up against Bank of America on monthly fee model, branch network, FDIC insurance, and ecosystem.
The headline number for most checking shoppers.
Bank of America everyday checking accounts generally carry a monthly maintenance fee that can be waived, for example with qualifying direct deposits or a minimum balance. Membership fees may apply on the RMO side; see membership.
RMO MyEveryday Checking vs. Bank of America everyday checking on fee model, branches, and ecosystem.
| Feature | RMO MyEveryday | Bank of America |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly maintenance fee | $0, no waiver | Monthly fee, waivable |
| How the fee is avoided | N/A — no monthly fee to waive | Qualifying direct deposit or minimum balance |
| Account model | Membership-bundled bank account | Standalone big-bank checking account |
| Branch network | RMO retail centers (more limited) | Extensive nationwide branches |
| ATM network | Nationwide network (in-network ATMs) | Extensive nationwide ATM network |
| Checking tiers | Four tiers, incl. MySecure second-chance option | Multiple everyday checking options |
| Online & mobile banking | MyRMO digital banking with bill pay & check deposit | Mobile and online banking |
| Member-to-member transfers | RMOPay built in — no separate signup | Person-to-person transfers supported |
| Bundled member benefits | Protection, insurance, roadside, payments under one membership | Rewards tied to linked banking relationship |
| FDIC insurance | Yes — up to $250K per depositor | Yes — up to $250K per depositor |
Comparison describes each provider’s generally available model for context. See RMO Bank account agreements and Bank of America’s deposit account disclosures for complete fees, terms, and conditions.
Bank of America has nationwide scale; RMO has bundling and a no-waiver fee model. Here’s how each tends to win.
Become an RMO member and open MyEveryday Checking online in minutes.
Update your employer’s direct deposit and any merchant auto-pays to point at the new RMO account.
Once a full pay cycle has cleared at RMO, close the Bank of America account.
No. RMO MyEveryday Checking has a $0 monthly fee with no waiver requirements — no minimum balance and no direct-deposit threshold to track. Bank of America’s everyday checking accounts generally carry a monthly maintenance fee that can be waived, for example with qualifying direct deposits or a minimum balance. With RMO MyEveryday there is no waiver to qualify for in the first place.
No. Bank of America is one of the largest U.S. banks and operates an extensive nationwide branch and ATM network. RMO uses retail centers and a nationwide ATM network, but its branch footprint is more limited geographically. If walk-in branch access in nearly every major U.S. city matters most to you, Bank of America has the larger physical footprint.
RMO is membership-based: a single membership bundles RMO Bank checking, savings, CDs, and money market accounts with RMO’s other divisions — protection, insurance, roadside, payments, and more. A traditional bank account is a standalone product; RMO checking is part of a wider member ecosystem.
Yes. To switch from Bank of America to RMO, open the new RMO account first, then update your direct deposit (employer) and any auto-pay merchants to point at the new account. Most institutions complete the switch in 1–2 pay periods. Once direct deposits and auto-pays are flowing to RMO, close the Bank of America account.
Yes. RMO Bank deposit accounts are FDIC-insured through Partner Banks (Members FDIC) up to applicable limits ($250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category) — the same standard of FDIC coverage that protects Bank of America deposits.
Become an RMO member and open MyEveryday or one of the four checking tiers. FDIC-insured, $0 monthly fee on the entry tier, no waiver hoops.