We believe everyone should be able to make financial decisions with
confidence. While we don't cover every company or financial product on
the market, we work hard to share a wide range of offers and objective
editorial perspectives.
So how do we make money? Our partners compensate us for advertisements that
appear on our site. This compensation helps us provide tools and services -
like free credit score access and monitoring. With the exception of
mortgage, home equity and other home-lending products or services, partner
compensation is one of several factors that may affect which products we
highlight and where they appear on our site. Other factors include your
credit profile, product availability and proprietary website methodologies.
However, these factors do not influence our editors' opinions or ratings, which are based on independent research and analysis. Our partners cannot
pay us to guarantee favorable reviews. Here is a list of our partners.
Capital One vs. Chase Business Checking: Which Is Better for Your Business?
Similar fees, different strengths. Here's how to choose which one is right for your business.
Kelsey Sheehy is a senior writer and NerdWallet authority on small business. She started at NerdWallet in 2015 and spent six years as a personal finance writer and spokesperson before switching gears to cover the financial decisions and challenges faced by small-business owners. Kelsey’s work has appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, Nasdaq and MarketWatch, among other publications. Kelsey has appeared on the "Today" show, NBC News and ABC’s "World News Tonight" and has been quoted by the Los Angeles Times, CNBC, American Banker, NPR and Vice, among other publications. Prior to joining NerdWallet, Kelsey covered college (and how to pay for it) for U.S. News & World Report. She is based in Washington, D.C.
Ryan Lane is an editor on NerdWallet’s small-business team. He joined NerdWallet in 2019 as a student loans writer, serving as an authority on that topic after spending more than a decade at student loan guarantor American Student Assistance. In that role, Ryan co-authored the Student Loan Ranger blog in partnership with U.S. News & World Report, as well as wrote and edited content about education financing and financial literacy for multiple online properties, e-courses and more. Ryan also previously oversaw the production of life science journals as a managing editor for publisher Cell Press. Ryan is located in Rochester, New York.
Published in
Updated
How is this page expert verified?
NerdWallet's content is fact-checked for accuracy, timeliness and
relevance. It undergoes a thorough review process involving
writers and editors to ensure the information is as clear and
complete as possible.
If you’re looking for a business checking account with a big-name bank, Capital One and Chase are likely on your radar. But the best business checking account depends on the unique needs of your business.
Do you make a lot of cash deposits? Need frequent branch access? Want an easy payment solution? Here’s how to decide between the entry-level accounts at Capital One and Chase for your business banking.
Capital One vs. Chase business checking
This guide breaks down the fees, perks and limits to help you decide which of these banks best suits your business. We’re focusing on each bank’s entry-level account for this comparison, but both offer options to upgrade as your business grows.
NerdWallet's ratings are determined by our editorial team. The scoring formulas take into account multiple data points for each financial product and service.
NerdWallet's ratings are determined by our editorial team. The scoring formulas take into account multiple data points for each financial product and service.
Monthly fee
$15, waived with a minimum balance of $2,000+ over 30- or 90-day average, whichever is greater.
$15 (multiple ways to waive)
Welcome offer
$500. Terms apply.
$500. Terms apply.
Free transactions
Unlimited electronic and in-person transactions.
Unlimited electronic transactions.
20 in-person transactions and/or paper checks per month.
Free cash deposits
With a teller: Up to $5,000 per month with no fee, after that $1 fee per $1,000 deposited.
At ATMs: No fee or monthly limit.
Up to $5,000 of in-branch cash deposits per statement cycle.
Branch locations
~ 260 branches across eight states plus Washington, D.C.
5,000+
ATM network
70,000+ ATMs, including Capital One, MoneyPass® and Allpoint® ATMs.
~14,000
Customer support
Business support hours: Monday - Friday: 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. ET
No weekend support or live chat support.
Chase doesn't publish business support hours.
No live chat support.
Capital One wins on transaction limits
Capital One Business Basic Checking® offers unlimited fee-free digital transactions (including mobile deposits, ACH transfers and bill pay), so small-business owners don’t need to keep count. You can also write paper checks and visit a teller whenever necessary.
By comparison, Chase Business Complete Banking® offers unlimited electronic transactions, including mobile deposits, ACH payments and debit card transactions, but customers are limited to just 20 paper checks and in-person transactions per month.
Capital OneCapital One Business Basic Checking®
4.2
NerdWallet rating
NerdWallet's ratings are determined by our editorial team. The scoring formulas take into account multiple data points for each financial product and service.
Chase operates more than 5,000 branches across 48 states, plus Washington, D.C. Capital One’s physical footprint is a fraction of that, with around 260 branches across eight states and Washington, D.C. Capital One also operates around 60 cafes in 18 states plus D.C. — but those are staffed by “ambassadors,” not bankers, and have limited services.
States where Capital One has branches States where Capital One has branches
Capital One has full-service branches in the following states:
Connecticut.
Delaware.
Louisiana.
Maryland.
New Jersey.
New York.
Texas.
Virginia.
Washington, D.C.
ChaseChase Business Complete Banking®
4.5
NerdWallet rating
NerdWallet's ratings are determined by our editorial team. The scoring formulas take into account multiple data points for each financial product and service.
This one is almost a draw — both accounts cap fee-free cash deposits with a teller at $5,000. What makes the difference? Capital One Business Basic Checking® charges $1 per $1,000 beyond the limit, compared with $2.50 per $1,000 with a Chase Business Complete Banking® account.
That said, neither bank charges for ATM deposits. Chase customers can deposit excess cash at Chase ATMs for no fee; Capital One customers can use Capital One or select Allpoint ATMs.
Incidental fees
Capital One Business Basic Checking®
Chase Business Complete Banking®
Out-of-network ATM fees
$2
$3
ACH transfers
No additional charge for standard ACH.
No additional charge for standard ACH.
Incoming wires
$15 domestic and international
$15 domestic and international ($0 if from Chase)
Outgoing wires
$25 domestic; $40-$50 international
$25-$35 domestic; $40-$50 international
Overdraft fees
$35 per item. No daily limit on overdraft charges.
$34 if overdrawn $50+; max 6/day
Capital One and Chase both charge for things like overdrafts and out-of-network ATM use. Their fees are comparable and characteristically high for brick-and-mortar banks. Look for an online-only business account to find low-cost wire transfers and save on other incidental fees.
Software tools
Capital One Business Basic Checking®
Chase Business Complete Banking®
Built-in invoicing
—
✓
Accept tap-to-pay in mobile app
—
✓
Zelle for Business
—
✓
Sub-accounts
—
—
Tax-planning tools
—
—
Contractor management
—
—
Chase wins on built-in business tools
Chase Business Complete Banking® goes beyond basic business banking tools like bill pay and mobile deposit. It includes Chase QuickAccept, which lets you accept tap-to-pay card payments via the Chase mobile app — no additional equipment necessary. Account holders also get built-in invoicing and can send and receive payments via Zelle for Business.
Capital One Business Basic Checking® has bill pay and syncs with QuickBooks, but no other included tools or integrations.
Starting Small: A newsletter to get your business off the ground
Subscribe for grant opportunities, product recommendations and no-nonsense advice from the Nerds.
Capital One vs. Chase business checking: The bottom line
Chase Business Complete Banking® wins for most businesses. Its branch network is unmatched and tools like invoicing and tap-to-pay card acceptance via the mobile app give it an edge over most brick-and-mortar business accounts.
Capital One Business Basic Checking® is more of an edge case. It has fewer digital tools and a limited branch network. But it's worth a closer look if your business runs on cash and teller visits rather than app integrations.