Insuring Your Deposits
What Is the FDIC?
The FDIC - short for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation - is an independent
agency of the United States government. The FDIC protects you against the loss of
your deposits if an FDIC-insured bank or savings association fails. FDIC insurance
is backed by the full faith and credit of the United States government. The term
"insured bank" is used in this brochure to mean any bank or savings association
with FDIC insurance.
To check whether your bank or savings association is insured by FDIC, call toll-free
1-877-275-3342, use "Bank Find" at www.fdic.gov/deposit/index.html, or look for
the official FDIC sign where deposits are received.
Why Is FDIC Insurance Important to You?
All FDIC-insured banks must meet high standards for financial strength and stability.
The FDIC, with other federal and state regulatory agencies, regularly reviews the
operations of insured banks to ensure these standards are met. Even with these safeguards,
some insured banks fail. If your insured bank fails, FDIC insurance will cover your
deposits, dollar for dollar, including principal and any accrued interest, up to
the insurance limit.
Historically, insured deposits are available to customers of a failed bank within
just a few days. Since the start of the FDIC in 1933, no depositor has ever lost
a penny of insured deposits.
What Does the FDIC Insure?
The FDIC insures all deposits at insured banks, including checking, NOW and savings
accounts, money market deposit accounts, and certificates of deposit (CDs), up to
the insurance limit.
The FDIC does not insure the money you invest in stocks, bonds, mutual funds, life
insurance policies, annuities, or municipal securities, even if you purchased these
products from an insured bank.
Basic Insurance Amount Is $250,000
The basic insurance amount is $250,000 per depositor per insured bank.
If you and your family have $250,000 or less in all of your deposit accounts at
the same insured bank, you do not need to worry about your insurance coverage --
your deposits are fully insured.
Coverage Over $250,000
The FDIC provides separate insurance coverage for deposit accounts held in different
categories of ownership.
You may qualify for more than $250,000 in coverage at one insured bank if you own
deposit accounts in different ownership categories.
Common Ownership Categories
The most common ownership categories are:
Single Accounts
These are deposit accounts owned by one person and titled in that person's name
only. All of your single accounts at the same insured bank are added together and
the total is insured up to $250,000. For example, if you have a checking account
and a CD at the same insured bank, and both accounts are in your name only, the
two accounts are added together and the total is insured up to $250,000.
Note: Retirement accounts and qualifying trust accounts are not
included in this ownership category.
Certain Retirement Accounts
These are deposit accounts owned by one person and titled in the name of that person's
retirement plan. Only the following types of retirement plans are insured in this
ownership category:
-
Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) including traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs, Simplified
Employee Pension (SEP) IRAs, and Savings Incentive Match Plans for Employees (SIMPLE)
IRAs
-
Section 457 deferred compensation plan accounts (whether self-directed or not)
-
Self-directed defined contribution plan accounts
-
Self-directed Keogh plan (or H.R. 10 plan) accounts
All deposits that an individual has in any of the types of retirement plans listed
above at the same insured bank are added together and the total is insured up to
$250,000. For example, if an individual has an IRA and a self-directed Keogh account
at the same bank, the deposits in both accounts would be added together and insured
up to $250,000.
Naming beneficiaries on a retirement account does not increase deposit insurance
coverage.
Note: For information about FDIC insurance coverage for a type
of retirement plan not listed above, refer to the FDIC resources on the back of
this brochure.
Joint Accounts
These are deposit accounts owned by two or more people. If both owners have equal
rights to withdraw money from a joint account, each person's shares of all joint
accounts at the same insured bank are added together and the total is insured up
to $250,000.
If a couple has a joint checking account and a joint savings account at the same
insured bank, each co-owner's shares of the two accounts are added together and
insured up to $250,000, providing up to $500,000 in coverage for the couple's joint
accounts.
Example: John and Mary have a $520,000 CD at an insured bank. Under
FDIC rules, each person's share of each joint account is considered equal unless
otherwise stated in the bank's records. John and Mary each own $260,000 in the joint
account category, putting a total of $20,000 ($10,000 for each) over the insurance
limit.
|
John
|
$260,000
|
$250,000
|
$10,000
|
|
Mary
|
$260,000
|
$250,000
|
$10,000
|
|
Total
|
$520,000
|
$500,000
|
$20,000
|
Note: Jointly owned qualifying trust accounts are not included
in this ownership category.
Revocable Trust Accounts
These are deposits held in either payable-on-death (POD) accounts or living trust
accounts.
Payable-on-death (POD) accounts - also known as testamentary or
Totten Trust accounts - are the most common form of revocable trust deposits. These
informal revocable trusts are created when the account owner signs an agreement
- usually part of the bank's signature card - stating that the deposits will be
payable to one or more named beneficiaries upon the owner's death.
Living trusts - or family trusts - are formal revocable trusts
created for estate planning purposes. The owner of a living trust controls the deposits
in the trust during his or her lifetime.
Note: Determining coverage for living trust accounts can be complicated
and requires more detailed information about the FDIC's insurance rules than can
be provided in this publication. If you have a living trust account, contact the
FDIC at 1-877-275-3342 for more information.
Deposit insurance coverage for revocable trust accounts is based on each owner's
trust relationship with each beneficiary. While the trust owner is the insured party,
coverage is provided for the interests of each beneficiary in the account. The FDIC
insures the interests of each beneficiary up to $250,000 for each owner if all of
the following requirements are met:
-
A beneficiary must be a person, charity or another non-profit organization (as recognized
by the Internal Revenue Service). All other beneficiaries are not eligible for separate
coverage as revocable trust deposits.
-
The account title must indicate the existence of the trust relationship by including
a term such as payable on death, in trust for, trust, living trust, family trust,
or an acronym such as POD or ITF.
-
For POD accounts, each beneficiary must be identified by name in the bank's account
records.
If any of these requirements are not met, the entire amount in the account, or any
portion of the account that does not qualify, would be added to the owner's other
single accounts, if any, at the same bank and insured up to $250,000. If the revocable
trust account has more than one owner, the FDIC would insure each owner's share
as his or her single account.
Note: The following example applies to POD accounts only. Coverage
may be different for some living trusts.
Example: Bill has a $250,000 POD account with his wife Sue as beneficiary. Sue has
a $250,000 POD account with Bill as beneficiary. In addition, Bill and Sue jointly
have a $1,500,000 POD account with their three children as equal beneficiaries.
|
Bill POD to Sue
|
$ 250,000
|
$ 250,000
|
$ 0
|
|
Bill POD to Bill
|
$ 250,000
|
$ 250,000
|
$ 0
|
|
Bill & Sue POD to 3 children
|
$1,500,000
|
$1,500,000
|
$ 0
|
|
Total
|
$2,000,000
|
$2,000,000
|
$ 0
|
These three accounts totaling $2,000,000 are fully insured because each owner is
entitled to $250,000 of coverage for the interests of each beneficiary in the accounts.
Bill has $1,000,000 of insurance coverage ($250,000 for the interests of each beneficiary
- his wife in the first account and his three children in the third account). Sue
also has $1,000,000 of insurance coverage ($250,000 for the interests of each qualifying
beneficiary - her husband in the second account and her three children in the third
account).
When calculating coverage for revocable trust accounts, be careful to avoid these
common mistakes:
-
Do not assume that coverage is calculated as $250,000 times the number of people
-owner(s) and beneficiary(ies) - named on a trust account. Coverage is provided
for the interest of each beneficiary named by each owner. Additional coverage is
not provided to the owners for naming themselves as owners. For example, a father's
POD account naming two sons as equal beneficiaries is insured to $500,000 only --
$250,000 for the interest of each beneficiary.
-
Do not assume that the FDIC insures POD and living trust accounts separately. In
applying the $250,000 per-beneficiary insurance limit, the FDIC combines an owner's
POD accounts with the living trust accounts that name the same beneficiaries at
the same bank.
Important!
Accounts held POD to a revocable living trust will be insured as if the account
were held in the name of the living trust.
For More Information from the FDIC
Call toll-free at:
1-877-ASK-FDIC (1-877-275-3342)
from 8 am until 8 pm (Eastern Time)
Monday through Friday
Hearing Impaired Line:
1-800-925-4618
Information courtesy of the FDIC: http://www.fdic.gov
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