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when were women allowed to have bank acco...

Women were not given the right to have bank accounts in one single global moment; it happened gradually and differently by country and even by state or region.

Key idea in one line

By the mid‑20th century many women could legally hold bank accounts, but they often faced heavy discrimination, and real “independent” access (especially to credit) did not become broadly protected in law until the 1960s–1970s.

United States

  • In the 19th century, some U.S. states began passing Married Women’s Property Acts, which allowed married women to hold property and make contracts, a legal base for having their own money and accounts.
  • California passed an 1862 law explicitly allowing women to open and control bank deposits in their own name, regardless of marital status.
  • Despite scattered state rights, banks could still refuse women; most institutions either limited or discouraged women from opening their own accounts well into the early–mid 20th century.
  • By the 1960s, it was generally legal for both single and married women in the U.S. to open bank accounts, but many banks still demanded a husband or father’s involvement, especially for checking accounts, loans, and credit.
  • A related landmark is 1974’s Equal Credit Opportunity Act, which finally prohibited discrimination in credit (credit cards, loans, mortgages) on the basis of sex or marital status.

The “1974 myth”

A lot of online posts say “women couldn’t have a bank account until 1974.” That’s an oversimplification:

  • Women had accounts earlier in many places, but without consistent legal protection and often at the whim of individual banks.
  • 1974 is crucial for credit and anti‑discrimination law, not the very first moment any woman could ever have an account.

Example: France

  • In France, a law in 1881 allowed women to open a savings account autonomously, breaking with rules that had treated married women as legally “incapable.”
  • A 1895 law then allowed them to make deposits and withdrawals without their husband’s approval, and a 1907 law let married women dispose of their wages freely.
  • Only in 1938 did French law more broadly recognize married women’s civil rights, and full political rights (like voting) followed later, in 1944.

How to think about “when were women allowed”

So, if you’re asking “when were women allowed to have bank accounts?” the historically accurate answer is:

  • There is no single global date; it depends on country and even region.
  • In places like the U.S. and France, some legal rights start appearing in the late 19th century.
  • Widespread, discrimination‑free access to personal bank accounts and especially to credit only really starts to take shape from the 1960s onward, with key anti‑discrimination laws in the 1970s.

If you tell me the country you’re interested in, I can narrow this down more precisely for that specific place.