Banks push mobile apps during support calls on customers who do not want them
Bank of America subjects customers to hour-long holds while repeatedly steering them toward the mobile app — even when callers explicitly state they do not use or want a smartphone. Older and non-digital customers are underserved as banks shift support costs to digital self-service. Hold times reflect deliberate investment in mobile over phone infrastructure.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyBank of America phone waits exceed 1 hour with no online self-service alternative
Bank of America consistently understates hold times at under 5 minutes when actual waits exceed an hour, and provides no online self-service paths for common account tasks, making even simple requests extremely time-consuming.
Bank of America Phone Wait Times Exceed 30 Minutes for Basic Service Requests
Customers attempting to resolve straightforward issues — such as linking a card to a payment service — must wait over 30 minutes just to reach a human agent at Bank of America. The extended hold times reflect a systemic underinvestment in accessible customer support. Customers who cannot resolve issues self-service have no viable escalation path and are left choosing between waiting and abandoning the bank entirely.
Bank of America Customers Bounced Between Channels Without Resolution
Retail banking customers facing account issues are repeatedly redirected from chat to phone to branch, with each channel unable or unwilling to resolve the problem. This multi-step runaround wastes hours of customer time and signals a breakdown in omnichannel service design. The pattern is a systemic frustration at large retail banks, not an isolated incident.
Bank of America customer service inaccessible with excessive wait times
Customers report waits exceeding 90 minutes to reach a live Bank of America representative, and agents routinely dismiss or ignore stated concerns. The problem reflects a systemic deprioritization of live support in retail banking. Demand exists for better escalation tools and consumer banking advocacy services.
Bank of America IVR Blocks Human Access and Restricts Self-Service Credit Transfers
Bank of America's phone automation makes reaching a live agent extremely difficult, and the online portal does not allow customers to self-transfer credit card credits to other accounts. Basic financial operations that should be instant require navigating opaque automated systems or long hold times. This friction erodes customer trust in one of the largest US retail banks.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.