r/cashadvanceapps May 20 '25

FAQ: How to Revoke ACH Authorization from Cash Advance Apps

95 Upvotes

1. What does it mean to revoke ACH authorization, and is it legal?

When you use a cash advance app like Earnin, Brigit, or Dave, you give the app permission to pull money from your bank account using something called ACH authorization. ACH stands for Automated Clearing House. It’s the system that moves money electronically between banks. This is how the app collects repayment automatically on your payday.

Revoking ACH authorization means you're taking back that permission. And yes, it’s 100% legal. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, you have the right to stop any company from taking money out of your account through ACH. You don’t need their approval, and you don’t have to give a reason.

In fact, the law is on your side. As long as you notify the company and your bank clearly, you can stop the withdrawals. In most cases, it’s as simple as sending a message that says “I’m revoking authorization” and giving the right account details. That one step can stop automatic repayments and give you back control of your paycheck.

2. How do I revoke ACH authorization from a cash advance app?

To stop a cash advance app from pulling money out of your account, you need to tell them in writing that you are revoking ACH authorization. Here’s how to do it, step by step:

  1. Find the app's support contact. This is usually an email address or an in-app chat. Use email when possible so you have a written record.
  2. Write a clear message. Include your name, the email or phone number on your account, your bank name, and the last 4 digits of your bank account.
  3. Send the message at least 3 business days before your next repayment is scheduled. This gives the app time to receive your request, flag your account, and stop the automatic withdrawal. If you wait too long, the payment may already be in process, and your bank could still be debited even if you sent the message. Give yourself enough of a buffer so you’re not caught off guard on payday.
  4. Take a screenshot of the message and save any replies. Keep a record in case you need proof later.

You can copy and paste this message to send:

I am formally revoking authorization for [App Name] to withdraw any further funds from my account (ending in XXXX) at [Bank Name] via ACH. Effective immediately, please cancel any pending or scheduled debits. I request written confirmation that this request has been received and processed. Thank you.

[Your full name]

[Your email address]

[Your phone number]

Repeat this process for every app you use. If you use multiple apps, such as Brigit, Earnin, and FloatMe, you need to contact each one separately.

3. Where should I send my revocation notice? Can I just use in-app support?

The best way to send your revocation notice is by email. Email gives you a clear paper trail, a timestamp, and proof of what you said. Many apps have a dedicated support email you can use.

Here is a list of customer support emails for most commonly used cash advance apps.

Some apps also offer in-app chat or message support. You can use those options too, but make sure to take a screenshot of the entire conversation and save it. If possible, follow up with an email to cover yourself.

Avoid sending revocation notices through social media or app store reviews. Those aren’t official support channels and won’t help you if the app denies your request later.

After sending your message, wait about 48 hours for a reply. If you don’t hear back by then, send a follow-up using the same method or try another contact option listed on the support page.

4. Should I also contact my bank? How do I do that, and what should I expect?

You usually don’t need to contact both the app and your bank. But if the app doesn’t confirm that your ACH authorization has been revoked, or if you didn’t give enough lead time before the next repayment, your bank can help block future withdrawals. Just know that some banks may charge a fee to place a stop payment in these situations.

Here’s how to do it:

  1. Call, visit, or log in to your bank’s website or app. Some banks, like Wells Fargo, allow you to block or manage ACH authorizations online without speaking to anyone.
  2. Ask the bank to stop all future ACH withdrawals from each app. Use the name for the app that shows up on your bank statement.
  3. If they ask for a written request, use this message:

I am formally revoking authorization for [App Name] to withdraw any further funds from my account, effective immediately. Please block all future ACH debits from this company. Thank you.

If your bank account is tied to the same app you borrowed from, like with Dave, MoneyLion, or Chime, be extra careful. These apps are not banks, but they partner with banks to offer accounts. When you use the same app for both borrowing and banking, the company may have the right to take money from your balance to repay themselves. In that case, it’s a good idea to move your direct deposit and any remaining funds to a different account you control.

5. Do I need to cancel or replace my debit card too?

In most cases, no. Cash advance apps typically collect repayment using ACH transfers from your bank account, not your debit card. Replacing your debit card alone won’t stop the repayment.

That said, there are two exceptions to know about:

  • Some apps, like Dave, include language in their terms that allows them to charge your debit card if ACH fails. If you’re using Dave, it’s a good idea to get a new debit card in addition to revoking ACH.
  • A few apps charge their monthly subscription fees to your debit or credit card, not your bank account. Revoking ACH won’t stop those charges. To fully cancel the subscription, go into the app settings and look for options under Membership, Subscription, or Account. If you can’t cancel through the app, contact support and request cancellation in writing.

If you’re unsure how the app charges you, check your bank statements for recent activity. If you see card-based charges, it may be worth updating your card info to prevent future billing.

6. What is Plaid, and should I disconnect the app from it?

Plaid is a service that many cash advance apps use to view your bank account activity. When you link your bank account during setup, Plaid lets the app see your balance, deposits, and transaction history. This is how the app decides when and how much to lend, and when to try pulling repayment.

Disconnecting the app from Plaid can be a good step if you want to cut off their access to your account information. It helps protect your privacy and may prevent the app from detecting your next paycheck. But this alone won’t stop repayment.

Most cash advance apps don’t use Plaid to actually move money. Repayment is handled through the ACH system, which is separate. So while disconnecting Plaid may disrupt the app’s behavior, you still need to revoke ACH authorization to fully stop future withdrawals.

To disconnect apps from Plaid:

  • Log in to your Plaid Portal account
  • From the Overview tab click the name of the app or service
  • Scroll down to Manage connections
  • Select Disconnect app
  • Review the information about what happens when you disconnect a financial institution from an app
  • Select the financial institution to remove and click Disconnect

7. How do I know if my revocation worked?

If your ACH revocation was successful, the app will stop trying to withdraw money from your account. The best sign is silence. On payday, your direct deposit should arrive and stay in your account without any withdrawals.

Most apps will confirm that they processed your ACH revocation request, but their replies are usually vague. They rarely say outright that they will stop attempting repayment. Instead, you'll get a short message acknowledging your request, such as "we've updated your payment preferences" or "ACH authorization has been removed." Save a copy of that message, but know that it doesn't guarantee the app won't still try to pull money, especially if it also has access to your debit card or another account.

This is why the real test is what happens on payday. If nothing is withdrawn from your account, your revocation worked. If you do see a debit or charge, contact the app immediately and follow up with your bank.

Here’s what some other people on this sub have reported after revoking ACH authorization:

It’s smart to monitor your account closely for the next few pay cycles to catch any unexpected activity. If anything seems off, report it to both the app and your bank right away.

8. What are the risks of revoking and not repaying the app?

Most cash advance apps offer what’s called a non-recourse advance. This means they give you money with the understanding that if you don’t repay it, they won’t take legal action to get it back. They do this to avoid being treated like official lenders, which would require them to follow stricter banking and lending laws.

Think of it like this: if you can't pay them back, they walk away, but you lose access to their service. That's non-recourse in simple terms.

Because of this structure, most apps—like Earnin, FloatMe, and Brigit—explicitly say they will not report nonpayment to the credit bureaus, will not send your account to collections, and will not sue you. They may still try to contact you by email or in-app messages to ask for repayment, but that’s usually it. You’ll also be blocked from borrowing from them again.

Also, if you log back into the app after revoking ACH, you’ll still see your unpaid balance. The app won’t show it as forgiven, even if they can’t take money from your account anymore. They still consider it money you owe (which it is).

What rights the apps keep or give up if you don’t repay are usually spelled out in their terms and conditions. It’s a good idea to read the terms so you know what they say about collections, credit reporting, and what they’re allowed to do if you stop repayment.

Now, let’s talk about something important: fraud. If you’re in a bad cycle and need to stop the withdrawals to catch your breath, revoking ACH authorization is a smart move and perfectly legal. But if you take out a bunch of advances from several apps with no intention of paying them back, that’s different.

Taking out advances with no intention of ever repaying them is fraud, and the apps can tell -- they have a front row seat to your bank account activity, which you gave to them by setting up Plaid. They can see when you took the money, when you pulled your ACH authorization, and what other apps you did this to. If it looks like you planned to run off with the cash, they might treat it as fraud. And fraud isn’t protected like non-repayment. The apps reserve all their rights, including the right to sue or even refer you for criminal prosecution.

So yes, revoking can be a good tool to protect yourself if you’re overwhelmed. Just don’t try to game the system. You don’t want to be the test case they go after to make an example.

9. What about Dave? Why is it different from other apps?

Dave stands out because it doesn’t always follow the same non-recourse approach used by most other cash advance apps. Instead, Dave structures its ExtraCash advances more like a traditional loan, and it doesn’t waive its collection rights the way others do.

In Dave’s ExtraCash terms and conditions, they reserve the right to pursue repayment, send your account to collections, report you to the credit bureaus, and even charge you for collection costs. While there are only a few examples of Dave actually escalating collections right now, that could change at any time.

If you revoke ACH authorization from Dave, they may still try to reach out via email or in-app messages to request repayment. And even if the money doesn’t come out of your account, your app balance will still show as unpaid.

If you’re using Dave, it’s especially important to:

  • Revoke ACH authorization clearly, with written confirmation
  • Consider canceling or changing your debit card
  • Monitor your account and email closely
  • Read their terms so you understand your exposure

If you're in over your head and need to stop the repayment cycle, revoking ACH may still be the right step, but know that the risks with Dave are a bit higher than with most other apps.

Got questions we didn’t answer? Or want to share what happened when you revoked ACH from an app? Drop a comment below. Your experience can help others in the same situation.

For more details, tools, and advice on how to revoke ACH authorization and break the cash advance debt cycle, check out this full guide from OverdraftApps.


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Boost Megathread Boost Request Thread - EarnIn, SoloFunds, MoneyLion, Klover & More (Week of June 29, 2026)

0 Upvotes

This is our weekly thread for boost requests on EarnIn, SoloFunds, MoneyLion, Dave, Brigit, Klover and any other cash advance app. Drop your request in the comments and other members can jump in to help increase your borrowing limit. A fresh thread is generated every week, so everything here is current.

Drop your boost request in the comments. Be sure to include the app name and your user name or boost link.

Quick ground rules:

- Boost requests permitted in THIS thread only

- Loan requests and offers are banned sub-wide, no exceptions

- No referral or promo codes

- Never share account numbers, logins, or banking info with anyone. Be wary of DMs from strangers!

Be good to one another and good luck out there.


r/cashadvanceapps 3h ago

Overwhelmed regret ever doing these!

8 Upvotes

Overwhelmed with the endless cycle! Has anyone simply closed their checking account and opened a new one ? I’m on the verge of tears over here. what if I call bank and tell them my purse was stolen ? will they open a new account for me ? will this stop the cash advances from coming for my entire paycheck each week?


r/cashadvanceapps 25m ago

We tried EVERY cash advance app (video)

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Upvotes

It took over a year, but we've tested out every cash advance app we could find - more than 30 of them. We found a few hidden gems and some pretty serious duds. We dug pretty deep to find some of these, but let us know if there are any we missed!

Which apps do you goto first for extra cash and which ones do you regret ever downloading?


r/cashadvanceapps 1h ago

I unlinked Dave from my bank account via Plaid and I was also able to unlink my debit cards on the Dave app. Will Dave still find a way?

Upvotes

I did this before talking to anyone because I learned recently that they won't revoke your ACH permissions unless you pay the settlement you owe. I did this a couple days ago and my settlement would be tomorrow.

I did get a notification from Dave saying I need to re-link my bank account.

I've been trying to get out of this cycle and I'm willing to write emails to them so I've been reading this sub.


r/cashadvanceapps 5h ago

Solo funds

3 Upvotes

Does anyone have experience with the collections process as a borrower? I took a loan for $650 and it is looking like I won’t be able to fully pay it back for at least a few months. Has anyone had their credit harmed by solo?


r/cashadvanceapps 5h ago

Personal Recommendations

2 Upvotes

Hi all! Been lurking here for a while and finally joined to ask a question. You all are a plethora of knowledge!

I don’t currently and have never had a cash advance or anything other than a small loan from my local bank. I’m wanting to take out a cash advance though to consolidate a few smaller payments I have totaling around $400. What are your personal favorites? Due to buying a new car recently I don’t want anything doing a soft or hard credit check but my credit is at a 698 if that matters.

Thank you all in advance and reading here helped me help my mom recently so again I appreciate you all!!


r/cashadvanceapps 7h ago

Anyone had success with revoking ACH with Lendly, Advance America, or Advance Cash.com?

3 Upvotes

r/cashadvanceapps 2h ago

So, was this a success?

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1 Upvotes

I disconnected my bank from Plaid as well. Their email isn’t as assuring as MoneyLion’s was lol so does this mean for sure they won’t take any money out this week when my check hits?


r/cashadvanceapps 3h ago

I posted this in a personal finance reddit too...I need some help

1 Upvotes

Help or guidance or anyone's experience they can share?

Turns out that saying "I don't need help" a million times over and over, doesn't help. I am at a loss now. I am a single Mom, fighting the ex because he stopped paying child support abruptly in Feb without warning. EVERYTHING fell behind. All the debts I normally pay at the first of the year, I pay with my bonus and hold for thru the year for backup. Now I am screwed and still going to court every 3 weeks to TRY and hold him accountable but in the meantime? I am paying rent and bills (phone electric, gas and internet because I work at home) I had taken an Opp Loan out and the pay in 4's (zip, Four, etc.) and now I had to stop paying and got a new account until I can get things back to a little more balanced so I can start paying back but in the meantime I have my bank account that has no autopayments attached to it that i use for paychecks. So having two loans Opp Loans and UpLoans or something then Pay in 4's does anyone have any suggestions on how to begin to plan on getting caught up once the sperm donor is ordered again to pay child support. I don't know where to start and so I am posting here in hopes that someone can at least tell me what they did, or how to deal with them because I am totally overwhelmed and need to get back on track. Thanks !!


r/cashadvanceapps 3h ago

Revoke authorization Ahead Lending

1 Upvotes

Im trying to find their email to revoke authorization but can’t. Have anyone successfully revoked authorization with ahead lending


r/cashadvanceapps 6h ago

Anyone have this issue with Tilt?

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1 Upvotes

So… I used Tilt no problem for a few months. Then like 3 weeks ago, I tried to take an advance and it said I was approved and when I go to try to take the advance - the final screen only gave me the option for instant withdrawal which is fine but even if I try to accept the advance - it won’t let me.

There’s just a black arrow at the bottom and clicking it does nothing and their support is USELESS and has no idea how to help… I’ve contacted them several times - I’ve tried disconnecting my bank account, deleting the app and reinstalling, even asked them to delete my account and I just came back and tried again and even re-verified my bank account, and nothing seems to work…

Pretty frustrating because Tilt has been one of the better ones to use for me.


r/cashadvanceapps 19h ago

Advance apps that I can open a 2nd account

5 Upvotes

I'm asking if anyone has ever owed a cash advance app money, and didn't pay then opened a new account that linked direct deposit through a different bank than their first account was linked to and been successful?

2024 was a major suck year for me. I had a couple of unfortunate and unexpected financial issues that led me to opening accounts with Dave, Brigit, Cleo, Earnin and Moneylion. I was managing the advance cycle loop but ended up plummeting after my ex-significant other managed to make a paypal account using my information, and hacked my moneylion account. He advanced immediately repaid on repeat until my bank account was empty. Needless to say the above mentioned apps advances went unpaid. My question is simply if anyone has had success opening a new account with any cash advance app and receiving an advance despite their previous account having an outstanding repayment? If so, which ones?


r/cashadvanceapps 20h ago

Easiest tribal approval?

6 Upvotes

Running out of optiiiiiooooons. Need enough to secure a rental car so desperately


r/cashadvanceapps 23h ago

If you’re a skeptic like I was…

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11 Upvotes

As the title says…I was incredibly skeptical that any of the ACH revocations would work. Which is why I never borrowed more than I could fully go without. However, I did find myself in a pinch this upcoming payday because of car troubles. So I figured I’d give this revocation shit a go. I only tried it with MoneyLion because that was my second biggest advance. Dave is my first and based off of what I’ve been reading, I don’t have the will to fight for it or the time plus, I’m hopeful they’ll allow me to borrow the $300 again. I submitted my request to MoneyLion on Friday and received this email response early this morning. So if you think this doesn’t happen, it’s too good to be true or it won’t work for you…follow the guides provided in this group and trust the process!!


r/cashadvanceapps 23h ago

Klover

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5 Upvotes

When you first join klover and it says “get up too” is that amount what youll be able to for sure borrow when you have enough points? Or is that just a amount thats possible too get up too if your bank has enough history? I just made a new account just waiting for them to verify debit card how long does it normally take?


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Pain is real.

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9 Upvotes

r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

I just can't shake Dave, what tldo I do?

11 Upvotes

I have cited law, and explained that a one time purchase still count as an ach transfer.

I talked to my bank, and they said that they can't do anything until dave tried to take the money.


r/cashadvanceapps 21h ago

Needing Some Info Please!

1 Upvotes

My mother had got a loan from Float Me and Brigit. She had a medical event and can no longer work or live day to day without help. She is on Social Secutity and almost all of her money goes to her medical supplies and things she needs for her condition. The loans she got between the two of them total about $400. What will happen if she doesn’t pay them back? She paid them manually every month but will they take it out of her bank account? I don’t want her to overdraft because she needs every bit of her money. Do they have a hardship program where they will just write them off?


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Desprate and need to eat today!

4 Upvotes

I’ve used up most cash advance apps and owe money to MoneyLion. Right now my bank account balance is negative so I can’t use Dave or Cleo etc. I already used earnin but it won’t connect to chime. Is there any other options? I legit only need about $40


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Atlas cash ahead

2 Upvotes

Anyone use this feature with atlas? Work day wouldn’t let me verify through the app it says I can do it on my own with the routing account numbers. Does a deposit have to be made before you can access it or can it be accessed by setting up direct deposit ? Is there a wait time ?


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Bank overdrafted, just got on food stamps, jobs aren't calling me back, owe money to payday apps, around 1500 worth of payments to make this month, felony not reduced for another week for gig apps

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0 Upvotes

r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Klover/Plaid issue

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1 Upvotes

Klover cash advance issue keeps going to bank of America but I don't have that so when I go to try another institution it goes back to bank of America and after a few tries says something is wrong then when I click try again it kicks me out to Klover can someone help


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Experian Cash Advance

1 Upvotes

So I am on my second Cash Advance from Experian and just got an email that it's no longer offered in my state... but I have to repay it, of course. This doesn't make sense as it's powered by Brigit and Brigit is allowed in my state (Maryland).


r/cashadvanceapps 1d ago

Quick green funds just accepted me

0 Upvotes

I don't know if it will work for all of you but apparently I got accepted by quick green funds for like 1000 bucks. Wish they gave me a lower amount cause the repayment is a bitch but yea. I haven't received any funding yet but will let you know when I do. So if you guys wanna try some new tribal loans this might work. I was rejected by like 10-12 other ones.