FDIC Insurance Calculator
Estimate your insured and uninsured deposits accurately.
Accounts owned by one person (Checking, Savings, CD)
Total balance of accounts owned by two or more people
Self-directed retirement accounts (e.g., IRAs)
Accounts with named beneficiaries
| Category | Balance | Insured Limit | Insured Amount | Uninsured Amount |
|---|
What is an FDIC Insurance Calculator?
An FDIC insurance calculator is a specialized financial tool designed to help depositors estimate their insurance coverage at an FDIC-insured bank. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) provides protection for money held in deposit accounts in the event of a bank failure. However, this protection is not unlimited.
The standard insurance amount is $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, for each account ownership category. This calculator helps individuals, families, and businesses navigate the complex rules regarding different ownership categories—such as single accounts, joint accounts, and revocable trusts—to determine if their total deposits exceed the safety limits.
Using an FDIC insurance calculator is essential for anyone with significant cash savings, specifically those with balances approaching or exceeding $250,000. It helps prevent financial loss by highlighting uninsured funds that may be at risk.
FDIC Insurance Calculator Formula and Rules
The core logic behind the FDIC insurance calculator relies on the concept of “ownership categories.” The FDIC does not simply sum all your money at a bank; it groups funds based on legal ownership.
The general mathematical formula for coverage is:
Total Insured = Σ (Min(Category Balance, Category Limit))
Key Variables and Limits
| Ownership Category | Coverage Formula | Standard Limit |
|---|---|---|
| Single Accounts | Sum of all single accounts | $250,000 total |
| Joint Accounts | (Total Balance ÷ Owners) | $250,000 per co-owner |
| Certain Retirement (IRAs) | Sum of self-directed retirement funds | $250,000 total |
| Revocable Trusts | Number of Beneficiaries × $250,000 | $1,250,000 (for 5 beneficiaries) |
Practical Examples of FDIC Coverage
Example 1: The Joint Account Advantage
Consider a married couple, John and Jane, who have the following accounts at the same bank:
- John’s Personal Checking: $200,000
- Jane’s Personal Savings: $200,000
- Joint Savings Account: $400,000
Calculation:
1. John’s Single Account: $200,000 (Fully Insured, under $250k).
2. Jane’s Single Account: $200,000 (Fully Insured, under $250k).
3. Joint Account: $400,000. Since there are two owners, each is insured for 50% ($200,000). Both shares are under the $250k cap per person.
Result: All $800,000 is fully insured.
Example 2: Exceeding Limits with Trusts
Robert has a Revocable Trust with a balance of $1,500,000. He names 3 unique beneficiaries.
Calculation:
The limit for a revocable trust is generally $250,000 per unique beneficiary.
Limit = 3 beneficiaries × $250,000 = $750,000.
Result: Only $750,000 is insured. The remaining $750,000 is uninsured and at risk if the bank fails.
How to Use This FDIC Insurance Calculator
- Gather Your Statements: Collect the current balances for all accounts held at a single banking institution.
- Categorize Accounts: Separate your balances into Single, Joint, Retirement (IRA), and Trust categories.
- Enter Balances: Input the total dollar amount for each category into the calculator fields above.
- Specify Owners/Beneficiaries: For Joint and Trust accounts, select the correct number of people involved. This dramatically changes the coverage limit.
- Review Results: The tool will instantly calculate your “Total Insured” and “Uninsured Amount.”
- Take Action: If you see red “Uninsured” amounts, consider moving excess funds to a different bank or restructuring your accounts (e.g., adding beneficiaries).
Key Factors That Affect FDIC Insurance Results
Several financial and legal factors influence the output of an FDIC insurance calculator. Understanding these can help you maximize your protection.
- Ownership Rights: The most critical factor. Coverage is based on legal ownership, not just whose name is on the checkbook.
- Beneficiaries: For trust accounts, the number of eligible beneficiaries directly acts as a multiplier for your coverage limit (up to 5 beneficiaries).
- Bank Consolidation: If two banks merge, your separate accounts at those banks become accounts at one bank. The FDIC provides a grace period (usually 6 months) for separate insurance before they are aggregated.
- Account Tying: Different accounts like Checking, Savings, and CDs within the same ownership category are added together. You cannot get separate $250k coverage for a checking and a savings account if both are “Single Accounts” at the same bank.
- Interest Accrual: Interest payments increase your balance. If your principal is exactly $250,000, an interest payment will push you over the limit, leaving the interest uninsured.
- Retirement Types: Not all retirement accounts are treated equally. Self-directed IRAs have their own category, but company 401(k) plans may be treated differently depending on how the bank holds the funds.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Related Tools and Internal Resources
Explore more of our financial planning tools to secure your wealth:
- Certificate of Deposit (CD) Calculator – Calculate potential interest earnings on your insured CDs.
- IRA Contribution Tracker – Monitor your retirement savings against annual IRS limits.
- Compound Interest Calculator – See how your savings grow over time with compound interest.
- Top Rated FDIC Banks – Read reviews of high-yield savings accounts at insured institutions.
- Asset Allocation Guide – Learn how to balance cash, stocks, and bonds in your portfolio.
- Emergency Fund Calculator – Determine how much cash you should keep liquid and insured.