When “Convenient” Fees Become a Consumer’s Nightmare: Wise
The Human Cost That No Settlement Line Captures
Imagine you’re sending money home. Maybe it’s rent for a parent in another country. Maybe it’s school fees for a younger sibling. Maybe it’s a loan repayment to someone who trusted you. You use Wise because the app is sleek, the marketing says it’s transparent, and you believe the fee shown on your screen is the fee you will actually pay.
Then the money doesn’t arrive by the date Wise promised. You contact customer support. You explain the situation. And Wise tells you it won’t even begin looking into the problem until you obtain and submit a bank statement from the account overseas, the account you don’t control, belonging to a person who may not speak the language of the bank’s paperwork, who may not have easy access to a branch, who may not know why you’re asking. That demand isn’t a small inconvenience. For many immigrants and working-class international families, it is a wall.
The federal government found that this wall was illegal. The law says Wise only needs your name, the recipient’s name, and the transfer details before it must start investigating. Wise added requirements the law does not permit, and the Consent Order confirms that some of those cases, cases that should have been decided in the customer’s favor, were instead closed against them. No one in this document gets named. The harms are aggregated into dollar totals and case counts. But behind those 1,000-plus cases of delayed funds and 351 instances of withheld refunds are real people who sent money they could not afford to lose, who waited, who followed up, who were handed an illegal obstacle, and who sometimes walked away with nothing.
There is also the question of language. Wise served customers across dozens of countries, many of them sending money precisely because they or their families have roots somewhere other than the United States. The law requires that the cancellations and dispute rights section of a receipt be provided in the language the customer used to conduct the transaction. Until March 2022, Wise printed that section in English only. If you don’t read English fluently and something goes wrong with your transfer, the page explaining your rights to fight back is in a language that is not yours. That is not an administrative oversight. That is a system that strips you of power at the exact moment you most need it.
The Euro holding fee violation has its own specific cruelty. Wise disclosed a monthly fee of 0.03% for customers holding over 15,000 Euros. The fee it actually charged, because it calculated daily, worked out to roughly 0.033% per month. The difference sounds tiny. Compounded over more than a year, across 2,000-plus customers, it added up to $130,000 extracted from people who had been given incorrect numbers and had no reason to suspect they were being overcharged. These were customers who trusted Wise with significant balances. That trust was not returned.
And then there is the Apple Pay and Google Pay trap. You load money using Apple Pay. You think you’re using a debit card. But at some point in the checkout flow, the transaction pulls from a credit card instead. Wise knew the fee was 3.8% in that case, triple the 1.25% it advertised. It did not disclose this distinction on its long form fee schedule. For over 17,000 people, the difference between what they expected to pay and what they actually paid was extracted quietly, automatically, without warning, for a period of more than three years starting in December 2018.
None of these harms required malicious intent to cause real damage. They required a company growing fast enough to generate $157.3 million in revenue between April 2022 and March 2023, while deliberately choosing not to scale the compliance team that would have caught these problems. The CFPB’s order says plainly that the violations were due “in part to Respondent’s failure to scale its compliance team and processes commensurate with the company’s rapid expansion.” That is a corporate decision. Growth was funded. Compliance was not.
From the Government’s Own Files: What Wise Actually Did
These are direct quotes from CFPB Administrative Proceeding File No. 2025-CFPB-0004, issued January 30, 2025. Nothing below is paraphrased.
“Respondent’s inaccurate representations about its ATM fees and charges were misleading and deceptive to U.S. consumers, in violation of sections 1031 and 1036 of the CFPA, resulting in Respondent overcharging thousands of consumers approximately $156,000 in fees.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶26
- This is a formal regulatory finding that Wise’s marketing materials constituted deceptive acts or practices under federal law, not a gray area or disputed allegation.
- The $156,000 figure represents the documented overcharges from one specific violation: the gap between what Wise advertised as the ATM fee structure and what U.S. consumers were actually charged.
- Wise claimed the new fee structure would be “cheaper for 80% of users.” For U.S. consumers, the actual fee structure was higher free-withdrawal thresholds replaced by lower ones ($200 Euro equivalent reduced to $100), a higher percentage fee (1.75% vs. 2.00%), and a per-withdrawal fee in dollars ($1.50) rather than British pounds (50p).
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶21
“Respondent required its payment operation team to trace customer funds when a consumer asserted that the funds were not available to the designated recipient by the disclosed date of availability and further required that the consumer provide a copy of the recipient’s bank account statement prior to initiating a trace.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶84
- Federal law requires only the sender’s name and contact info, the recipient’s name, and the transfer details before an investigation must begin. Wise added a demand the law explicitly does not permit.
- The order confirms that because of this illegal requirement, some error investigations that should have been resolved in the consumer’s favor were instead resolved against them. (¶86)
- This was a systematic policy applied by the payment operations team, not a one-off customer service error.
“Over 2,000 consumers who held a balance above 15,000 EUR incurred approximately $130,000 in fees that they should not have incurred, constituting the difference between fees actually charged and fees that would have been charged before the change.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶36
- Wise disclosed a monthly EUR holding fee of 0.03% but charged a daily rate of 0.00109%, which compounds to approximately 0.033% per month, 10% higher than the disclosed rate.
- This discrepancy ran from January 1, 2021, through March 28, 2022, a period of nearly 15 months during which over 2,000 customers were quietly billed more than they were told they would be.
“Between approximately December 1, 2018, when the issue first occurred, and April 19, 2022, Respondent failed to accurately disclose the Apple Pay and Google Pay credit card fees on its long form disclosures. As a result, over 17,000 consumers incurred a total of over $140,000 in overcharged fees.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶41
- Wise disclosed a 1.25% fee for Apple Pay and Google Pay funding. The actual fee when a credit card was used instead of a debit card was 3.8%, more than three times higher.
- This ran for over three years and four months, affecting more consumers than any single other violation in the order.
- Consumers had no way to see this distinction in the disclosures they were shown. The information was withheld from the legally required long form disclosure document.
“Respondent failed to determine whether errors occurred within 90 days of receiving a Notice of Error in violation of § 1005.33(c)(1) of the Remittance Rule.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶82
- Wise had an internal policy to resolve errors within 90 days. It failed to follow that policy and failed to train customer service staff on the required timelines.
- The 90-day window is not a suggestion. It is a statutory right under the Remittance Rule. Failing to meet it leaves consumers in limbo on transactions involving their own money.
“This was due, in part, to Respondent’s failure to scale its compliance team and processes commensurate with the company’s rapid expansion and growth in the U.S. market.”
— CFPB Consent Order, ¶21
- This is the CFPB putting plainly on the record that Wise grew its revenue and customer base while choosing not to proportionately invest in the infrastructure needed to comply with consumer protection law.
- Between April 2022 and March 2023 alone, Wise generated $157.3 million in revenue from these services. The total ordered in consumer redress is $449,550.99. That is roughly 0.29% of one year’s revenue.
What Wise Told You vs. What Was Actually True
Across multiple products, Wise showed customers one number while charging another. This visual maps the documented gaps.
Who Gets Hurt When a Fintech Skips Compliance
Public Health
Financial harm to low-income and immigrant families is a documented public health issue. The violations documented here concentrated losses on populations with the least cushion to absorb them.
- Remittance senders in the United States disproportionately include immigrant workers sending money to support families abroad. When funds fail to arrive by the promised date and the investigation is blocked by an illegal document demand, those families face shortfalls in rent, food, and medical expenses.
- The 90-day investigation failure means consumers spent up to three months in financial limbo on transactions they needed resolved, a period of stress and uncertainty with documented links to anxiety, depression, and deteriorating chronic health management.
- The foreign language receipt failure stripped non-English speakers of their right to understand how to file a complaint or request an error investigation. If you cannot read the dispute rights section of your receipt, you effectively have no dispute rights. This disproportionately affected the same immigrant communities most dependent on the remittance service.
- The Apple Pay and Google Pay credit card fee was hidden for over three years. For a consumer trying to send $500 overseas, the difference between a 1.25% fee and a 3.8% fee is $12.75. That may cover a day’s meal for a recipient family. Multiplied across 17,000 consumers and years of transactions, the cumulative nutritional and household impact is real and unaccounted for in the $449,550.99 redress figure.
Economic Inequality
Every structural feature of these violations hit hardest on people who could least afford it, while generating revenue for a company that earned $157.3 million in a single year from these same services.
- The total documented consumer harm across the order, ATM overcharges ($156,000), EUR holding fee overcharges ($130,000), Apple Pay/Google Pay overcharges ($140,000), and ATM change-in-terms overcharges ($130,000), adds up to approximately $556,000 extracted from consumers. The total redress ordered is $449,550.99. The math means some consumers will not be made fully whole.
- The $2.025 million civil penalty represents approximately 1.29% of the $157.3 million in revenue Wise earned from these services in a single 12-month period. For a company of this scale, a fine this size functions as a cost of doing business rather than a deterrent.
- Wise’s failure to invest in compliance while aggressively growing its customer base is a pattern that benefits shareholders and executives while the financial burden of violations falls on individual consumers who cannot individually absorb the cost of a corporation’s compliance deficit.
- The 351 instances of withheld refunds after error determinations represent consumers who correctly complained, correctly proved their case, and still did not receive their money back within the legally required one business day. Each of those 351 cases is a family or individual who waited longer than the law allows for money they were already owed.
- Wise did not begin tracking document retention compliance until December 2020, despite having operated remittance transfer services since September 2016. For roughly two and a half years, if a consumer’s error investigation was mishandled, there may be no record of how it was handled at all.
What the Numbers Reveal About Corporate Priorities
What You Can Do With This Information
The Consent Order runs for five years from January 30, 2025. Wise’s Board and its Chief Executive Officer and Chief Compliance Officer are personally accountable for compliance under its terms. The order prohibits Wise from misrepresenting fees, failing to disclose changes in terms, or blocking error investigations with unauthorized documentation demands. If you believe Wise has violated any of these terms, you have an avenue to report it.
Watchlist: Regulatory Bodies With Jurisdiction
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB): The primary enforcer of this order. File complaints at consumerfinance.gov or call 855-411-2372. Wise is required by this order to identify CFPB contact information in its app’s Activity Page, website landing page, and Help Center.
- State Money Transmitter Regulators: Wise is licensed in 48 states, D.C., Guam, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico. Each state has its own money transmitter licensing authority. If you are in one of those jurisdictions, your state regulator has independent enforcement authority over Wise’s operations.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC): Overlapping jurisdiction on deceptive marketing and advertising claims. The ATM fee blog post violation sits squarely in FTC territory as well.
- Department of Justice (DOJ): While no criminal referral is mentioned in the source document, patterns of consumer harm at this scale can trigger DOJ interest, particularly if violations continue post-order.
- Electronic Fund Transfer Act private right of action: EFTA gives individual consumers the right to sue for violations. If Wise failed to investigate your error properly, missed the 90-day deadline, or withheld your refund after confirming an error, you may have standing to pursue an individual claim regardless of this Consent Order.
Grassroots Action and Mutual Aid
- If you are part of an immigrant community that uses remittance services, connect with local immigrant rights organizations that can help you understand your EFTA rights and assist with filing complaints on your behalf in your language.
- Share the CFPB complaint portal with remittance-sending networks. Collective complaint volume accelerates regulatory attention. One complaint is a data point; hundreds of complaints on the same company’s error resolution failures are a pattern the Bureau cannot ignore.
- Mutual aid organizations that serve working-class immigrant families can integrate financial rights education into their existing work. Knowing that a remittance company must investigate your error within 90 days, and that demanding a foreign bank statement is illegal, is the kind of practical power that organized communities can transmit person to person.
- If you used Wise between December 2018 and April 2022 via Apple Pay or Google Pay, or between January 2021 and January 2025 and experienced an ATM overcharge, an error that was denied after you reported late delivery, or a refund that came late or not at all, contact Wise’s designated consumer relief contact (required by the order to be published) and ask explicitly whether you are an Affected Consumer under the Consent Order and whether you are entitled to redress.
- Push locally for credit union adoption. Community credit unions and cooperative financial institutions serve remittance needs with accountability structures that answer to members, not shareholders. Shifting community money out of fintech platforms that treat compliance as optional sends a market signal that cannot be ignored.
The source document for this investigation is attached below.
please read me for i am the sources for this article:
https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_wise-us-inc-consent-order_2025-01.pdf
https://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/documents/cfpb_wise-us-inc-stipulation_2025-01.pdf
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