bobcat
Well-known Member
- Location
- Northern Calif
The U.S. lost a net total of more than 300 bank branches in 2025, with hundreds more branches that close each year than open. Between 2017 and 2025, the national branch network shrank by 14.8%, dropping from 86,469 to 73,649 locations, and physical in-person branches have been trending downward since 2012.
This isn't a problem with the health of the banking industry; it is more of a behavioral shift in how it's done.
In short, the expenses of having a physical bank outweigh the net gain from it. There is too much cost pressure.
More people are turning to online banking and the convenience of it. You can deposit checks, do money transfers, withdrawals, get loans, and even have the bank handle your bill paying, and some even have investment portals for stock trades.
This trend parallels the shift towards online shopping. Behavioral changes mean changes in the physical landscape. Bank branches will still exist for some needed face-to-face transactions, but people may have to drive farther to make that happen. There will be some "banking deserts". It's a sign of the times.
This isn't a problem with the health of the banking industry; it is more of a behavioral shift in how it's done.
In short, the expenses of having a physical bank outweigh the net gain from it. There is too much cost pressure.
More people are turning to online banking and the convenience of it. You can deposit checks, do money transfers, withdrawals, get loans, and even have the bank handle your bill paying, and some even have investment portals for stock trades.
This trend parallels the shift towards online shopping. Behavioral changes mean changes in the physical landscape. Bank branches will still exist for some needed face-to-face transactions, but people may have to drive farther to make that happen. There will be some "banking deserts". It's a sign of the times.
