EFFECT OF BANK CHARGES ON CUSTOMERS SWITCHING BEHAVIOUR IN SOME SELECTED DEPOSIT MONEY BANKS IN DRAMATURG
Keywords:
Bank Charges, Customer Switching Behaviour, Deposit Money Bank, Interest Rate, Transaction CostAbstract
The general objective of this study was to assess the effect of bank charges on customers’ bank switching behaviour in Nigerian banking industry. The study is descriptive in nature and data were collected through structured questionnaire and face to face interview. 200 questionnaires were administered to the respondents but only 185 questionnaires were completed and returned to the researcher for data analysis. However, the populations of the study were drawn from five deposit money banks in Damaturu randomly which they are; First Bank Plc, GT Bank Plc, Keystone Bank, Polaris Bank, Jaiz Bank. Hypotheses were formulated and tested using Pearson Correlation Analysis instrument. The research findings confirmed that the level of interest rate on a bank loans, the cost of bank transactions, and unfair bank charges were positively affecting customer switching behavior in deposit money banks in Damaturu. Therefore, based on the findings drawn from this study, the following recommendations are propounded in order to achieve the main objective of the study; the banks management should review their levels of interest rates on loans, transactions cost and unfair bank charges if the banks are to retain their existing customers and attract new ones because high transaction fees and charges have a negative impact on customer switching behavior in banking sector. And finally CBN should also review the policy of banks charges imposing on banks as it was also contributing toward banks losing customers and customers losing confidence in banks.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Journal of Global Accounting

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Articles submitted to JOGA should not have been published or are currently under review by another Journal. Kindly see the guide for the preparation of the manuscript for details. Successful submission of articles by author(s) for publication clearly implies that the work is not an infringement of any existing copyright warranty as JOGA reserves the right to be indemnified by the author(s) where any breach of such warranty is proven. For ease of dissemination and to ensure proper policing of use, papers and contributions become the legal copyright of JOGA once published unless otherwise agreed.
Permission clearance should be obtained by the author(s) where applicable for the use of any content of interest not originally created by them. This must be done before the submission of the article to JOGA. Failure to do so may lead to a lengthy delay in publication, as JOGA is unable to publish any article which has permissions pending. Thus, the rights JOGA requires are:
- Non-exclusive right to reproduce the material in the article or book chapters.
- Print and electronic rights.
- To use the material for the life of the work (for instance, there should be no time restrictions on the re-use of material).
Where tables, figures or excerpts of more than 250 words are reproduced from another source, it is expected that:
- Author(s) should obtain the necessary written permission in advance from any third-party owner of the copyright for the use in print and electronic formats of any of their text, illustrations, graphics, or other material in their manuscript. Permission must also be cleared for any minor adaptations of any work not originally created by the author(s). The author (s) should not assume that any content freely available on the web is free to use.
- Where the author adapts a significant number of any material, the author(s) must inform the copyright holder of the original work.
- Author obtains any proof of consent statements
- The author must acknowledge figure(s) and content adopted or adapted in work utilizing source(s) and further capture them in the list of references.