
Why CFOs can’t afford to ignore bank fee analysis

By Dory Malouf
Senior Director, Global Business Value AdvisoryShare
Most CFOs don’t know how much they spend on bank fees, let alone whether those charges are accurate. In a time when cost control is paramount, that blind spot can cost millions.
According to recent data, a staggering 75% of global CFOs are concerned about the impact of interest rates on their organizations. In today’s volatile interest rate environment, CFOs are scrutinizing every outflow with unprecedented rigor. As borrowing costs rise and holding cash becomes more expensive, the margin for error shrinks. Every dollar saved from unnecessary expenses goes straight to the bottom line, and yet, one area continues to escape more organizations’ cost discipline efforts: bank fees.
Many organizations lack visibility into the true cost of banking services, from payments to FX to liquidity management. Without systematic analysis, CFOs are flying blind, unable to validate whether charges are accurate, competitive, or even aligned with contracted terms.
Why bank fee analysis belongs on the CFO’s desk
Quietly eroding margins
Most CFOs focus on big-ticket items when reviewing costs, but consider this: hidden bank fees can chip away at margins just as effectively as an underperforming department. The problem is exacerbated in organizations with outdated contracts or high transaction volumes, where fees compound without oversight. Bank fee analysis provides an early opportunity to identify unnecessary expenses and negotiate better terms, setting the tone for wider cost discipline.
Better forecasting for smarter planning
Bank fees aren’t just a line item on your statement; they’re a signal. Unexplained variances in fees can throw off cash flow forecasts and skew capital allocation plans. Regular analysis ensures that fee patterns align with your expectations, resulting in more accurate liquidity forecasts and stronger financial models.
Building stronger bank relationships
Unchecked fees can strain vendor and banking relationships over time. A systematic approach empowers organizations to address discrepancies head-on, validate contract compliance, and even gain leverage in negotiations. It sends a clear message to partner banks that your organization is diligent and serious about cost control.
And the payoff is substantial. Industry experience shows that organizations that implement effective bank fee analysis typically save between 20-30% on their annual bank fees. For a company with $1 million in annual bank fees, that’s $200,000-$300,000 in recurring yearly savings, enough to fund one or two full-time positions, or to reinvest in growth. These are not just theoretical savings but real, bottom-line improvements that can move the needle for CFOs focused on cost discipline.
Mitigating regulatory and pricing risks
Hidden bank fees often mask broader risks. From operational inefficiencies to pricing terms that no longer reflect fair market value, these issues can have compliance or reputational repercussions. Proactively addressing fees ensures you close gaps that could lead to larger vulnerabilities tied to regulatory or contractual obligations.
Challenges in managing bank fees
While the benefits of fee analysis are clear, many CFOs still face formidable barriers:
Lack of transparency: Bank fees are often buried within statements, with little supporting documentation or explanation.
Volume of data: For multinational firms managing multiple bank accounts, manual tracking of statements is nearly impossible.
Benchmarks missing: Without industry comparatives, how do you know if your rates and fees align with market standards?
Limited expertise: Finance teams often lack the tools or resources to accurately analyze complex fee structures.
Inefficient processes: Manual reconciliation is prone to errors, delaying decisions and reducing confidence in forecasting.
Overwhelming volume: Monthly bank fee statements contain so much granular data that reviewing them thoroughly would require a dedicated full-time resource, so most teams only glance at the summary, missing hidden issues unless there’s a major spike.
The role of automation
Enter the era of automated bank fee analysis
Gone are the days of labor-intensive manual reconciliations and Excel-driven processes. Automation is transforming bank fee analysis by enabling CFOs and treasury teams to:
Collect and decode fee data with ease
Leading platforms automatically pull bank statements, decode complex invoicing, and categorize charges by type and service. This saves countless hours of human effort.
Benchmark fees against peers
Modern tools integrate industry benchmarks, giving CFOs a clear view of which charges are above market rates.
Surface actionable insights
Automation empowers teams by flagging unusual variances, identifying overcharges, and pinpointing opportunities to optimize contracts or renegotiate pricing.
Improve compliance
With real-time data and AI-driven reporting, finance leaders can consistently ensure compliance with contractual terms.
How automation strengthens CFOs’ strategic role
Automated bank fee analysis doesn’t just improve finance operations; it elevates the CFO’s strategic value, enabling them to:
Enhance liquidity management with more accurate cash flow forecasting.
Drive cost savings by negotiating competitive banking terms using data as leverage.
Mitigate risks linked to inaccurate or hidden fees.
Enable efficient capital allocation by identifying unnecessary drain on working capital.
By converting hundreds of hours spent on manual analysis into actionable intelligence, CFOs free their teams to focus on higher-value activities, like scenario planning and investment decisions.
Moving forward with bank fee transparency
Organizations without a robust bank fee analysis framework are operating at a strategic disadvantage in today’s economy. Bank fee management is no longer a “back-office issue” but a key enabler of broader financial objectives, from cash flow optimization to risk reduction.
CFOs can no longer afford to sidestep the conversation about bank fees. By implementing automation-driven analysis tools, finance leaders gain the insights they need to minimize costs, improve forecasting, and solidify their bank partnerships.
Written By

Dory Malouf
Senior Director, Global Business Value Advisory
Dory is Senior Director, Global Business Value Advisory at Kyriba, bringing more than 20 years of treasury practitioner experience at leading Fortune 500 companies across digital transformation, global cash management, capital markets, risk management, working capital optimization, and M&A. Featured in Treasury & Risk Magazine and AFP case studies, Dory collaborates directly with Treasury and Finance executives to document and execute strategic digitization initiatives through benchmarking, capability maturity modeling, and risk mitigation—delivering clear roadmaps to best practice adoption and compelling ROI. He lives in the Metropolitan Detroit area with his wife, twin boys, and his dog Raja.
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