What is the FDIC? How does it protect your finances?

Brett Holzhauer
Brett Holzhauer March 29, 2023

What is the FDIC? 

The FDIC stands for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. It’s an independent government agency that insures consumers’ funds up to $250,000 per account type, per insured bank, if that bank fails. It was started after the passage of the Banking Act of 1933 in order to protect the financial system and consumers after the stock market crash that occurred in 1929. The resulting bank runs were a key factor in the Great Depression as banks around the country began to fail en masse.  

Deposits in FDIC-insured banks and thrift institutions (which includes mutual banks, savings and loan associations) are automatically insured up to $250,000.  

That means your deposits in your M1 Checking 1 account automatically receive FDIC insurance. 

Credit unions and brokerage accounts are insured by other organizations: the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) and the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), respectively. 

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How does the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation work? 

FDIC-insured banks pay premiums into a fund that is managed by the FDIC. This requirement, along with earned interest from U.S. government investments, generates a large pool of money from the insured banks together with the fund’s earnings that can be used to cover the losses in the event of a bank failure. If a bank failure is large enough to exhaust the fund, the U.S. Treasury will step in to cover depositors to ensure faith for consumers that their funds are safe. 

When banks fail, the FDIC coordinates the search for and identification of other banks to step in and acquire the failed banks’ deposits and loans. The FDIC will search for a buyer of the failed institution to take over the borrower’s funds and assets. The customers of the failed bank are then transferred to the new financial institution and can continue with their banking activities. 

As of September 2022, there were 4,746 financial institutions insured by the FDIC. This is down significantly from just over 8,000 commercial banks in 2001 — with only a portion of them being bank failures. Of the approximately 3,200 no longer around, only 563 of them were bank failures — with a large portion of them coming during the 2008 Great Financial Crisis. The majority of banks no longer around can be attributed to mergers or acquisitions. 

How the FDIC covers failed banks 

In the case of a bank failure, the FDIC has been able to recover every dollar of insured funds since it was founded in 1933. This means that consumers can feel secure that their money will be protected up to the $250,000 insurance limit when they deposit it with an FDIC-insured bank. 

What types of accounts are insured by the FDIC? 

The FDIC insures deposits up to the limit for several different types of accounts held at insured financial institutions, including: 

  • Deposit accounts such as checking, savings and money market accounts 
  • Time deposits like certificates of deposit (CDs) 
  • Bank-backed checks like cashier’s checks, money orders, and certified checks 
  • Negotiable order of withdrawal (NOW) accounts 

The FDIC covers $250,000 per person, per account, per bank. So if a couple has a joint account, both spouses are protected up to $250,000 each for that account, for a combined total of $500,000. And if either spouse has their own individual account, they’re protected up to $250,000 on that account, too. 

What is not covered? 

There are several things that the FDIC doesn’t cover, including: 

  • Stocks and mutual funds 
  • Bonds 
  • Cryptocurrency 
  • Life insurance policies and annuities 
  • Municipal securities 
  • Safe deposit boxes or the items within them 

Is M1 FDIC insured? 

Yes, M1’s Spend checking account is FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per person on the account. Later this year, we’ll launch a high-yield savings account that will also be FDIC-insured. 2 

Additionally, stocks and ETFs are protected in M1 Invest accounts under Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC), up to $500,000 — which also includes up to $250,000 in cash. 

1 M1 Spend is a wholly-owned operating subsidiary of M1 Holdings Inc. M1 is not a bank. M1 Checking Accounts furnished by Lincoln Savings Bank, Member FDIC.  

2 M1 is not a bank. M1 Savings Accounts are furnished by B2 Bank, NA, Member FDIC.  

‘Brokerage products and services are not FDIC insured, no bank guarantee, and may lose value. Brokerage products and services are offered by M1 Finance LLC, Member FINRA / SIPC.’ 

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