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Customer Forced To Keep “Inactive” Bank Account Alive By Withdrawing One Penny Every Two Years

by Annie Nguyen
December 7, 2025
in Social Issues

A man from Michigan found himself trapped in a bizarre standoff when a Pennsylvania bank wouldn’t let him close an old account with only $1.31 left in it. What should’ve been a simple request turned into a petty showdown involving inactivity fees, stubborn policies, and a single penny becoming the hero of the tale.

Instead of paying the bank a fee just to walk away, the Redditor devised a wonderfully mischievous workaround: withdrawing exactly one cent every two years to keep the account “active.”

The confused teller, the bank’s endless paperwork, and the pure spite fueling the plan make this story feel like a sitcom plot about financial revenge. If you love petty brilliance wrapped in real-world absurdity, buckle up. Want the juicy details? Dive into the original story below!

A man learns his dormant bank account will be charged an inactivity fee unless he interacts with it every two years

Customer Forced To Keep “Inactive” Bank Account Alive By Withdrawing One Penny Every Two Years
Not the actual photo

Bank won’t let me withdraw all funds? Ok?

English is my first language and I’m typing on a laptop so I expect you all to judge this post harshly.

I moved from Pennsylvania to Michigan a few years ago and only go home once a year or so.

A few years back I transferred the vast majority of my bank account to Michigan,

but they were giving me a hard time about closing the account

and so I withdrew all funds except for $1.31.

I haven’t touched the account since that time

so two years later I get a notice for inactivity stating

that I will be charged five dollars if my account remains inactive for 2 years.

I spoke with 3 different people on the phone

but they would not let me close out the account without incurring a fee

and since I’m never moving back to that town I refuse to pay them or add any money to the account.

Cue MC so I have to interact with the account once every two years or else pay you five dollars?

Fine, give me $0.01 please.

When I was there in person last month I withdrew one penny from the account

so now it’s good for another two years.

The attendant definitely gave me a weird look

but at this rate my account will remain open for the next 260 years!

People can accept rules, inconvenience, and paperwork, but feeling powerless in the face of rigid systems touches something deeper. Both the bank and OP carried their own emotional motivations here.

The bank, through its policies, sought efficiency and structure. OP, on the other hand, simply wanted closure, a clean end to a financial relationship, and instead found himself blocked by arbitrary requirements. It’s easy to empathize with the quiet frustration he must have felt when a $1.31 balance turned into a bureaucratic wall.

From a psychological perspective, OP’s decision to engage in malicious compliance wasn’t driven by pettiness but by a need to reclaim control in a situation where he felt dismissed.

When institutions deny reasonable requests, people often experience what psychologists call reactance, a motivational push to regain freedom when it feels restricted.

More than the money, OP was responding to the emotional trigger of being told “no” to something simple and logical. His one-cent withdrawal became symbolic: a small act to restore his sense of agency.

There’s also something deeply satisfying about the outcome. The bank insisted on strict adherence to the “activity” requirement, so OP followed that rule perfectly.

Instead of losing five dollars every two years, he ensured the account remained active until long after anyone involved today will still be around, all at the cost of a single penny. Readers instinctively feel good witnessing such poetic justice. In the end, OP’s choice was honored on the bank’s own terms.

Expert insight strengthens this point. Research in behavioral economics shows that people often react more strongly to perceived unfairness than to financial consequences. As Yamagishi et al. (2009) demonstrate, “in a series of experiments, we demonstrate that certain players of an economic game reject unfair offers even when this behavior increases rather than decreases inequity”.

This finding illustrates that individuals may willingly endure personal cost simply to protest an unfair situation, a pattern that helps explain why even small injustices can provoke powerful and unexpected forms of resistance.

When a system feels illogical or punitive, individuals naturally look for ways to restore fairness, not through aggression, but through clever adherence to the very rules being imposed on them.

Connecting this back to OP’s experience, malicious compliance offered emotional resolution where customer service failed. It allowed him to follow the rules while highlighting their absurdity, turning a moment of helplessness into one of empowerment.

Ultimately, this story offers a gentle reminder: institutions function best when they apply rules with humanity, not rigidity. When people feel heard, they don’t need to resist, even with a penny. It’s worth asking: how often do small policies create big frustrations simply because no one stops to consider the human being behind the account?

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

These Redditors cheered the clever pettiness and shared their own bureaucratic revenge

boRp_abc − Upvote for the perfect intro.

RedTedBedLed − Then you turn around and deposit the money right back in.

Doesnt it have bill pay? Just pay yourself a penny every once and a while.

But mail it, so they have to pay the 50 cent stamp each time

Disastrous-Shoe-6780 − Just keep withdrawing and depositing the same penny.

This group questioned the bank’s logic, noting it created more work for itself

Pennyfeather46 − I don’t understand why a bank would give a customer a hard time for closing their account.

Isn’t that just normal banking business?

So now they instead of them just sending you the remaining balance,

they increase their own costs including postage & auditing. Wtf?

TheDkone − you should setup a direct deposit of .01 per pay.

hopefully there is a small cost to your bank for DDs

djasonpenney − Make sure they send your bank statements by snail mail.

These commenters offered tactics to maximize chaos and keep the account costly

ifeelnumb − Oh, bless. But I would still file a complaint with the regulating agency.

https://www. occ. treas. gov/about/what-we-do/index-what-we-do. html maybe?

Banks will fall over themselves to avoid a federal complaint.

papercut2008uk − I'd make thousands of transactions of 0.01, put it in, take it out, as many times as possible,

then make them give you paper statements. Cost them huge amounts for being complete A holes.

Edit_ easy to do with online banking, take 5-10 minutes

when your on the toilet to start transferring money back and forth.

No issue with tax or income issues from all the transactions because it's pennies,

but will have to show up on bank statements!

You can also put a reminder or note on the transaction, F U BANK. lol

Llunedd − Hilarious. Back in the 80's, when everybody had money to burn,

my dad kept getting letters from a bank he did not use.

"Hello Llunedd'sdad, we have opened an account

for you at our branch and deposited 25 cents in it to get you started. "

My dad would go down to the bank, a block from his office,

withdraw the quarter, and close the account.

This miniature financial saga shows how a simple request can snowball into a masterpiece of petty resistance. A tiny rule turned a forgotten $1.31 account into a 260-year endurance match, all because the bank couldn’t let go without a fee.

Would you have walked away, paid the fee, or embraced the chaos like this Redditor did? And have you ever felt driven to out-bureaucratize a bureaucracy? Share your thoughts, and your pettiest victories, below!

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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