The FDIC generally insures up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category , not simply “per account.”

Quick Scoop: Core Rule

  • The standard FDIC insurance limit is $250,000 per depositor, per bank, for each account ownership category (like single, joint, certain retirement, revocable trust, business, etc.).
  • This means you cannot get more coverage just by opening multiple checking or savings accounts in the same ownership category at the same bank; those balances are added together under one $250,000 limit.

What “Per Account” Really Means

When people say “how much does FDIC insure per account,” they’re usually mixing up:

  • Per depositor : Coverage is based on you as an individual.
  • Per bank : Your accounts at different FDIC‑insured banks each get separate coverage.
  • Per ownership category :
    • Single (in your name only)
    • Joint (with one or more co‑owners)
    • Certain retirement accounts (like IRAs)
    • Some trust and business categories

Each of these categories can get its own $250,000 limit per depositor per bank , so one person can often get well over $250,000 in total FDIC coverage at the same institution if money is spread across different ownership categories.

Simple Examples

  • If you have:
    • A checking and savings account in just your name at the same bank, they are combined and insured up to $250,000 total.
  • If you have:
    • A single‑owner account in your name, and
    • A joint account with your spouse at the same bank,
      each category can have up to $250,000 of coverage per person , so you can effectively be covered for more than $250,000 total at that bank.

In forum discussions, a common correction is that it is not $250,000 per individual account , but per person, per bank, per ownership category , with joint shares and other structures changing how the limit actually applies.

Little Table for Clarity (Core Categories)

Ownership category Typical FDIC insurance limit
Single (one owner) $250,000 per owner, per bank
Joint (two or more owners) $250,000 per co‑owner, per bank
Certain retirement (e.g., IRA deposits) $250,000 per owner, per bank
Revocable trust accounts $250,000 per owner per unique beneficiary (subject to specific rules)

If You’re Worried About Going Over

  • Spreading deposits across multiple FDIC‑insured banks can increase total protection.
  • Using different ownership categories (single, joint, certain trusts, retirement) can also expand coverage at one bank, as long as the rules for each category are followed.

Bottom line: FDIC does not simply insure “$250,000 per account”; it insures $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category , which often allows significantly more than $250,000 to be protected if structured correctly.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.