Table of Contents
- "Swag Bag"
- What A New Chair Could Mean For The FDIC
- What Is the FDIC and What Does It Mean to Me? - TheStreet
- Roosevelt, 100 Days & the New Deal - History 12
- What Is the FDIC and What Does It Mean to Me? - TheStreet
- FDIC sues CoreLogic and LPS | WAV Group Consulting
- Ashley Mihalik on LinkedIn: 90 Years of the FDIC
- The Best Training Tip from FDIC Wasn't from a Class - Fire Product Search
- What Is the FDIC and What Does It Mean to Me? - TheStreet
- FDIC International Awards - Fire Training Conference



What is the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC)?


How Does FDIC Insurance Work?



FDIC Insurance Limits
The FDIC provides insurance coverage up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank. This means that if you have deposits in multiple accounts at the same bank, the total insurance coverage is $250,000. However, if you have deposits in multiple banks, each bank's deposits are insured separately, up to $250,000. For example, if you have $200,000 in a checking account at Bank A and $200,000 in a savings account at Bank B, both deposits are fully insured, as each bank's deposit is below the $250,000 limit.