FDIC insurance in plain English
What the $250,000 limit actually covers, how ownership categories multiply coverage legitimately, and what FDIC does not protect — written without jargon.
What FDIC is and what it insures
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is an independent agency of the federal government created in 1933 in the wake of widespread bank failures during the Depression. Its core function is to insure deposits at participating US banks and savings associations. If an insured bank fails, the FDIC pays depositors up to the coverage limit — typically within a few business days — out of the Deposit Insurance Fund, which is funded by premiums the banks themselves pay.
The standard deposit insurance amount is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category. This level was made permanent by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act in 2010. Before then, the standard limit had been $100,000, raised temporarily during the financial crisis and then permanently locked in.
"Deposits" covered by FDIC means checking accounts, savings accounts, money market deposit accounts, CDs, NOW accounts, and similar deposit products at the bank. It does not include investments held at a brokerage (those are governed by SIPC), money market mutual funds (a securities product), stocks, bonds, mutual funds, annuities, life insurance products, or the contents of a safe deposit box. The distinction is between deposit products (yours, sitting on the bank's balance sheet as a liability) and securities or other products (which the bank may custody or distribute but which aren't deposits).
How the $250,000 limit really works
The limit is more flexible than the headline implies because it applies per ownership category at each insured bank. A single person at a single bank with accounts spread across multiple ownership categories can hold more than $250,000 in total insured deposits at that single bank.
The main ownership categories the FDIC recognizes for consumer accounts:
| Category | Coverage |
|---|---|
| Single accounts (held in your name alone) | $250,000 per owner |
| Joint accounts (two or more owners with equal withdrawal rights) | $250,000 per co-owner |
| Certain retirement accounts (e.g., self-directed IRAs) | $250,000 per owner |
| Revocable trust accounts (POD, ITF, living trusts) | Up to $250,000 per beneficiary, subject to limits |
| Irrevocable trust accounts | Coverage depends on beneficiary interests |
| Corporation, partnership, or unincorporated association accounts | $250,000 per entity |
| Employee benefit plan accounts | Per participant non-contingent interest |
| Government accounts | Per category rules |
This is the source of all the "structure can multiply your coverage" guidance. A married couple at one bank can have substantial coverage by combining single accounts in each spouse's name, a joint account, and properly structured POD designations — and even more by spreading across multiple insured banks. The exact arithmetic depends on the specific structure and the beneficiary designations.
The FDIC publishes the rules in detail and offers an estimator tool (EDIE — Electronic Deposit Insurance Estimator) at FDIC.gov that walks through coverage for a specific situation. For any household holding more than $250,000 in deposits, running EDIE is the right way to confirm coverage rather than relying on intuition.
How to multiply coverage legitimately
The legitimate ways to extend coverage at the same bank involve using different ownership categories:
- One spouse holds a single account (covered to $250,000), the other spouse holds a separate single account (covered to $250,000), and they hold a joint account together ($250,000 per co-owner = $500,000). Combined household coverage at that one bank: up to $1,000,000.
- Adding a properly structured revocable trust account (POD/ITF designation) with eligible beneficiaries can layer additional coverage on top, subject to the FDIC's revocable-trust rules.
- A self-directed retirement account (IRA-style) gets its own $250,000 bucket per owner per bank.
The other path is straightforward: spread balances across multiple insured banks. Each insured bank is a separate $250,000-per-category bucket. Two banks means two buckets, three banks means three. The administrative cost is real but small.
Note: "different branches of the same bank" is not different banks. The legal entity matters. Some financial-services companies operate multiple separately-chartered banks; verify charter status if you're consolidating large balances under one brand name.
What FDIC does not cover
The list of things FDIC does not insure is shorter than the list of things it does, but it's important:
- Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs. Brokerage investments are governed by SIPC, a different program that covers up to $500,000 in securities (including $250,000 in cash) at a failed brokerage. SIPC protects against broker failure, not market loss.
- Money market mutual funds. These are securities, not deposits, and are not FDIC-insured even when sold through a bank's brokerage arm. Money market deposit accounts (MMAs) at a bank are insured; money market mutual funds at a brokerage are not.
- Cryptocurrency. No part of any crypto holding is FDIC-insured, regardless of how the holding is marketed. Some companies have characterized cash that backstops a crypto product as "FDIC-insured at a partner bank" — that coverage, where it exists, is limited to the specific cash and structure and does not extend to crypto values.
- Annuities, life insurance. These are insurance products with their own (separate) regulatory regime and protection mechanisms.
- Contents of a safe deposit box. The bank rents you the box; the contents are yours and not insured by the bank or the FDIC.
- Losses from theft, fraud, or operational errors. The Electronic Fund Transfer Act, Regulation E, and other consumer-protection rules cover many of these scenarios, but the FDIC's deposit insurance is specifically for bank failure.
Lessons from recent failures, in plain terms
Bank failures are rare in absolute terms but they happen, and the FDIC's response pattern is consistent: insured depositors get their funds back, typically within a few business days, through a transfer to an acquiring bank or a direct payout from the Deposit Insurance Fund. Uninsured depositors (those with balances above the per-category limit at the failed bank) face a recovery process that can take longer and may not return 100 cents on the dollar.
Historical episodes — including the 2008-era failures and more recent regional bank stresses — have, in practice, sometimes resulted in invocation of systemic-risk exceptions that protected uninsured depositors. These are case-by-case policy choices that are not guaranteed in advance. The robust planning posture is to stay within the per-category insured limit, not to rely on a future case-by-case exception.
Using the EDIE tool
The FDIC's Electronic Deposit Insurance Estimator (EDIE) is the authoritative way to confirm coverage for a specific situation. You enter your accounts at a single bank — type, ownership category, balance, beneficiaries if any — and EDIE returns the insured amount and any uninsured residual. It's free and produces the same answer the FDIC would apply in a failure scenario.
Run it any time your situation changes meaningfully (a marriage, a divorce, a major inheritance, a death of a co-owner, a balance crossing the per-category limit) or any time you consolidate balances at one bank.
EDIE is at edie.fdic.gov on the FDIC's site.
Verifying a bank is FDIC-insured
The FDIC's BankFind Suite at FDIC.gov is the lookup tool. Search by name, by location, or by FDIC certificate number. Banks are required to display the FDIC member logo at branches and on their websites; if a self-described "bank" doesn't appear in BankFind, that's a meaningful signal — fintech apps sometimes describe themselves in banking-adjacent language without being chartered banks, and the deposit-insurance question may turn on a partner bank's coverage rather than the fintech's own.
Credit unions are insured separately, through the NCUSIF, administered by the NCUA — covered in our NCUA guide.