Banking Terms That Confuse Brazilians in the U.S. — Explained
You opened your first U.S. bank account and the paperwork was full of terms you'd never seen before. Routing number. Overdraft protection. FDIC Insurance. You nodded along — but weren't totally sure what any of it meant.
That's completely normal. The American financial system has its own vocabulary, and a lot of it doesn't have a direct equivalent in Brazil. Some terms refer to concepts that exist in both countries but work differently here. Others are entirely new.
This guide covers the most important ones — starting with basic banking, then moving into credit — explained in plain English, with context for anyone who knows the Brazilian system.
Checking Account vs. Savings Account
In the U.S., banks formally separate two types of accounts: a checking account for daily transactions and a savings account for saving money over time. These aren't two features of the same account — they're distinct products, and most people have both.
A checking account is what you use for everyday spending: paying bills, receiving your paycheck, using your debit card. It typically has no limit on the number of transactions, though limits and account terms can vary by institution. A savings account is designed to hold money you're not spending immediately, and it earns interest — though rates vary widely depending on the institution.
If you're familiar with the Brazilian conta corrente and poupança, the logic is similar — but the separation in the U.S. is more formal, and the two accounts serve more clearly defined roles. One important note: a standard savings account at a traditional U.S. bank often pays very little interest (sometimes as low as 0.01% annually). For a savings account that earns more interest, you should specifically look for a high-yield savings account — covered below.
Routing Number
A routing number is a nine-digit code that identifies your bank — not your personal account, but the institution itself. It tells the financial system where to send or receive money on your behalf. According to the American Bankers Association, there are approximately 22,000 active routing numbers in the U.S.
You'll need your routing number whenever you set up direct deposit with an employer, make or receive an ACH transfer, pay bills electronically, or write a check. On a U.S. paper check, the routing number always appears at the bottom left — nine digits, printed first. The account number follows to its right.

The closest Brazilian equivalent would be the bank's ISPB code or the número da agência — but in the U.S., the routing number is used far more frequently in everyday transactions. You'll be asked for it regularly, so it's worth memorizing or knowing where to find it quickly (usually in your banking app, on a check, or on your bank's website).
Direct Deposit
Direct deposit is the system by which your employer sends your paycheck electronically, directly into your bank account, using your routing and account numbers. It's the standard way to receive wages in the U.S. — many employers default to it, and some may require it depending on their payroll practices.
Beyond the convenience, setting up direct deposit often unlocks benefits. Many U.S. banks waive monthly maintenance fees, offer access to your paycheck up to two days early, or provide other perks when you have direct deposit active on your account.
Setting this up correctly — giving your employer the right routing and account numbers — is one of the first practical financial tasks when you start a new job. Some employers provide a direct deposit form; others ask you to enter the information through an online HR portal.
ACH Transfer
ACH stands for Automated Clearing House — the electronic network that processes bank-to-bank transfers in the U.S. When you pay a bill online, send money between your own accounts at different banks, or receive a payroll deposit, it almost always goes through the ACH network.
The key characteristic of ACH: it's not instant. Transfers are processed in batches throughout the business day, and standard ACH transfers typically take one to three business days to complete. Some banks offer same-day ACH for an additional fee, but it's not universal.
For Brazilians used to PIX — free, instant, 24/7 transfers — this is one of the most jarring adjustments. The U.S. has been developing faster payment infrastructure (the Federal Reserve's FedNow system, for example), but it hasn't yet reached the seamlessness of PIX. Plan accordingly: if you need money to arrive by a specific date, send it earlier than you think necessary.
Wire Transfer
A wire transfer is a direct, bank-to-bank electronic transfer — faster than ACH (typically same day or next business day) but not free. Wire transfers are used for larger payments, urgent transfers, or international transactions.
The practical difference: ACH is for everyday payments and is generally free or very low cost. A wire transfer is a specific tool — used when speed matters, the amount is large, or the transaction crosses international borders — and typically costs between $15 and $50 per transfer, sometimes more for international wires.
If you're sending money to Brazil or receiving a large payment from abroad through a traditional bank account, you'll likely be dealing with a wire transfer on the U.S. side. It's worth understanding the fees your bank charges before you send, since they vary significantly across institutions.
Overdraft and NSF Fee
An overdraft happens when you spend more money than you have available in your checking account — and the bank covers the transaction anyway, then charges you a fee for doing so. An NSF (Non-Sufficient Funds) fee is what happens when the bank declines the transaction instead of covering it — and still charges you for the attempt.
The practical takeaway: keep a buffer in your checking account and set up low-balance alerts through your banking app. Running a negative balance in the U.S. doesn't just cost you a fee — repeated overdrafts may, depending on a bank’s policies and account history, be reported to ChexSystems, a banking history database that some banks check before opening new accounts.
High-Yield Savings Account (HYSA)
A high-yield savings account is a savings account that generally pays a higher interest rate than a standard savings account, though rates vary by institution and market conditions. They're typically offered by online banks and digital financial platforms, which can pass their lower overhead costs on to customers through higher rates.
As of April 2026, many high-yield savings accounts offer annual percentage yields (APYs) above the national average, though rates are variable and subject to change at any time.
For Brazilians accustomed to the poupança, a high-yield savings account in the U.S. may be a practical, FDIC-insured alternative for preserving and growing funds without investment risk. However, there are three practical differences to keep in mind:
- Taxation: Unlike the poupança, interest earned in a U.S. account is generally taxable
- Liquidity: While your money is accessible, some banks may limit the number of monthly withdrawals
- Requirements: You may need to mantain a minimum balance to earn the advertised APY or avoid fees.
FDIC Insurance
The FDIC — Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation — is the federal agency that insures deposits at member banks. If a bank fails, the FDIC guarantees your money up to $250,000 per depositor, per account category. This protection applies automatically at any FDIC-member institution; you don't need to sign up for it.
The Brazilian equivalent is the FGC (Fundo Garantidor de Créditos), which offers similar protection up to R$250,000 per institution. The structural difference is that FDIC protection is backed directly by the U.S. federal government.
One thing worth noting: not every financial platform that handles your money is FDIC-insured in its own right. Some fintechs hold deposits through partner banks that carry the FDIC coverage. Before opening an account anywhere, verify whether your funds are FDIC-insured and through which institution.
A Living Vocabulary
The terms in this guide cover just the essentials — the ones that come up from the moment you open your first account and start building your financial life in the U.S. But the American financial system is broad, and the vocabulary keeps expanding as you move into new areas: credit, mortgages, investments, taxes, insurance.
The good news is that the concepts become easier to navigate once you have the foundation. Each term you understand is one less thing that can catch you off guard.
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, banking, credit, tax, legal, or investment advice.
