A bank-to-bank transfer between Chase and Wells Fargo takes the same amount of time as a transfer between any other two US banks — because they all use the same underlying payment network (ACH) or wire system. What changes is the type of transfer you choose.

The short answer: Standard ACH takes 1–3 business days. Same-day ACH takes a few hours. Wire transfers post by end of business day. Zelle is nearly instant.

Transfer Time by Method

Transfer Method Typical Time Cost Available 24/7?
Standard ACH 1–3 business days Free No (processes weekdays)
Same-Day ACH Same business day Free–$10 No (business days, before cutoff)
Domestic wire transfer Same business day $15–$35 outgoing No (business hours)
Zelle Minutes Free Yes
RTP (Real-Time Payments) Seconds Varies Yes

Common Bank-to-Bank Transfer Times

All standard ACH transfers between major US banks follow the same NACHA rules: initiated by the cutoff time, processed overnight, available to the recipient 1–3 business days later.

Transfer Standard ACH Same-Day ACH Wire
Chase → Bank of America 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Bank of America → Chase 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Chase → Wells Fargo 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Wells Fargo → Chase 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Chase → US Bank 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Bank of America → Wells Fargo 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Wells Fargo → Bank of America 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Chase → PNC 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
PNC → Chase 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Chase → Ally 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Ally → Chase 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Chase → SoFi 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day
Bank of America → Schwab 1–3 business days Same business day Same business day

The bank pair does not change the timeline. ACH rules are set by NACHA and apply equally to all US banks. Chase to Bank of America takes the same time as Bank of America to Chase.

Why Standard ACH Takes 1–3 Business Days

The ACH network operates in batches — not in real time. Here is what happens after you initiate a transfer:

  1. Day 1 (initiation): Your bank submits the ACH request to its processing window. Most banks have cutoff times between noon and 5 PM ET.
  2. Overnight processing: NACHA processes ACH transactions in batches throughout the night.
  3. Day 2 (settlement): The receiving bank receives the funds and credits the recipient’s account. This is usually 1 business day for transfers initiated before the cutoff.
  4. Availability: Some banks hold funds for an additional day before making them available, giving a range of 1–3 business days total.

Weekends and federal bank holidays add time. A transfer initiated on Friday after the cutoff won’t begin processing until Monday.

Same-Day ACH — Faster But Not Instant

Same-day ACH was rolled out by NACHA in phases between 2016 and 2022. Nearly all US banks now support receiving same-day ACH. Most large banks — Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, PNC, US Bank — also support sending same-day ACH.

Same-day ACH cutoff times (Eastern Time):

Bank Same-Day ACH Cutoff
Chase 12:00 PM ET
Bank of America 12:00 PM ET
Wells Fargo 12:00 PM ET
PNC 11:30 AM ET
US Bank 12:00 PM ET
Ally Bank 12:00 PM ET

Initiate before the cutoff on a business day, and funds typically arrive at the receiving bank by end of that business day. Same-day ACH does not operate on weekends or federal holidays.

Wire Transfers — Fastest Option

Domestic wire transfers are the fastest way to move large amounts between banks. Unlike ACH, wires move in real time through the Fedwire or CHIPS network.

  • Sending bank posts debit: Immediately upon processing
  • Receiving bank receives funds: Same business day, usually within 2–4 hours
  • Funds available to recipient: Same business day

Wire transfer cutoff times:

Bank Domestic Wire Cutoff
Chase 4:00 PM ET
Bank of America 5:00 PM ET
Wells Fargo 4:30 PM ET
PNC 6:00 PM ET
US Bank 5:30 PM ET

Wires initiated after the cutoff or on weekends/holidays process on the next business day. See the full bank wire transfer fees guide for cost comparisons.

Zelle — Nearly Instant for Enrolled Banks

Zelle transfers between two banks that support Zelle are typically instant — funds appear in minutes, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Zelle is the fastest option for personal transfers under the daily limit (usually $500–$2,500 depending on the bank).

Zelle does not work for business-to-person payroll, tax payments, or transfers to non-US accounts.

RTP (Real-Time Payments) — Instant, But Limited

The RTP network, operated by The Clearing House, settles transfers in seconds, 24/7/365, including weekends and holidays. RTP is increasingly available at major banks for certain payment types (bill payment, business payroll, instant transfer features), but consumer-to-consumer RTP transfers are not yet universally available.

How to Initiate a Bank-to-Bank Transfer

From your bank’s app or website:

  1. Go to TransferExternal Transfer or Send Money
  2. Add the receiving bank account (routing number + account number)
  3. Enter the amount and select the transfer speed (standard or same-day)
  4. Submit

First-time external transfers may require a verification step: your bank will make two small micro-deposits (e.g., $0.12 and $0.37) to the receiving account that you must confirm. This verification typically takes 1–2 business days.

Transfer Limits by Bank

Bank-to-bank ACH transfers have daily and monthly limits that vary by bank:

Bank Standard ACH Limit Wire Limit
Chase $25,000/day $100,000+/day (branch)
Bank of America $10,000/day standard Varies by account
Wells Fargo $2,500/day (online) Varies
PNC $2,000/day (standard) Varies
US Bank $2,500/day Varies

For the full breakdown, see wire transfer limits by bank and the ACH transfer time guide.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy