Getting free access to cash shouldn’t require treasure hunting. But in the U.S., ATM fees still hit consumers hard—on average, an out-of-network ATM withdrawal can cost $4–$5 when you combine your bank’s fee and the ATM operator’s surcharge. If you’re with a financial institution that partners with a surcharge-free network, you dodge that cost. Which brings us to Allpoint, MoneyPass, and CO-OP: three of the biggest ATM networks aiming to save you those fees.
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So: which offers the most free access? Which network is best for you—and for us, as a community bank, how do we communicate this value clearly to our customers? In this post, we'll compare Allpoint, MoneyPass, and CO-OP in depth. Let’s sort out coverage, convenience, and what to watch for—so you can maximize your free ATM access.
Before diving in: when your bank or credit union joins a surcharge-free ATM network, it means customers can use ATMs in that network without paying the usual out-of-network fees or surcharges (when using participating machines). The upside depends heavily on how many ATMs are available in the network, where they are located (near you, where you shop, travel, etc.), and whether the network supports both withdrawals and deposits (if needed).
Here’s a snapshot of the three networks we’re comparing:
Network |
Approximate Number of Surcharge-Free ATMs |
Type of Institutions / Customers Served |
Highlights |
Allpoint |
Over 55,000 surcharge-free ATMs worldwide; more than 40,000 in retail locations in the U.S. |
Banks, credit unions, prepaid card programs; strong presence in retail – CVS, Walgreens, Target, etc. |
Great retail coverage; increasingly adds deposit-enabled ATMs (Allpoint+) |
MoneyPass |
About 40,000 ATMs nationwide free to participating customers (estimates vary slightly by source) |
Strong with online banks, credit unions, regional banks; many retail / convenience location ATMs plus branches. |
Good in suburban / rural areas; often used by fintechs and neobanks without branch networks. |
CO-OP (Co-op Solutions / CO-OP Network) |
Nearly 30,000 surcharge-free ATMs; more than 5,500 shared branches across all 50 states. |
Mostly credit unions; strong option for credit union members; shared branches add extra value. |
Shared branches (for teller-type services), deep presence in credit union community; less retail-retailer saturation than Allpoint, but strengthens in branch areas. |
Let’s judge them by a few criteria that matter most to users:
What this means for you: If you live or travel in areas with lots of retail outlets (big box stores, pharmacies), Allpoint is likely to give the broadest surcharge-free ATM access. If you’re more rural or depend more on branches (credit union or local bank), CO-OP may match or exceed in convenience once you factor shared branches.
One of the biggest practical differences: are the ATMs where you shop or travel every day?
Access to deposit ATMs makes a difference if you want full service—especially if you don’t have a branch nearby.
How many banks or credit unions partner with each network matters—this influences whether your institution is part of it, or whether switching banks is beneficial.
Even the best network is only useful if you can find the participating ATM easily.
No network is perfect. These are things to watch for so you really get free access:
Putting together coverage, convenience, and breadth, here’s how I see the comparison:
In most U.S. metro or suburban areas: Allpoint likely gives you the broadest fee-free withdrawal options. But if you need deposit-capability or value having branches, CO-OP may equal or even outdo on practical coverage.
Here are concrete steps to make sure you’re getting the most free ATM access you can:
Look at your bank’s website, mobile app or ask customer support. It should list “surcharge-free network” or “partner ATMs.” If not, check Allpoint, MoneyPass, and CO-OP locators manually.
Where do you shop? Where do you drive past often? Use network locators (or bank’s app) to see which network covers those areas. Do you frequently go to Walgreens, CVS, Target, Circle K, etc.? If yes, Allpoint might give you more convenience.
If you need to deposit checks or cash, find ATMs or shared branch locations that accept deposits in your network. If your bank doesn’t offer that, you might still need to plan deposit trips to branches.
Even if an ATM is physically in a participating retail store, it might not yet display the network’s logo. Sometimes signage or screen display lags changes.
If ATM fees are a pain and your current bank doesn’t offer good surcharge-free access, a second account at a bank or credit union with Allpoint or CO-OP might make sense.
Some banks reimburse out-of-network ATM charges up to a certain amount monthly. That helps soften the pain when free access isn’t possible.
If I had to pick a “best overall” for free ATM access, Allpoint often gives the widest everyday convenience thanks to its large retail-based footprint. But “best” depends on your needs:
Always check your bank’s participation and local ATM map. Free access is great—but convenience and coverage matter just as much.