Safety is the first question many people ask before moving money to a credit union. The answer is reassuring: federally insured credit unions carry the same level of government-backed protection as banks.
NCUA vs FDIC at a glance
| NCUA (credit unions) | FDIC (banks) | |
|---|---|---|
| Fund | Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF) | Deposit Insurance Fund (DIF) |
| Standard limit | $250,000 | $250,000 |
| Per | Member, ownership category, institution | Depositor, ownership category, institution |
| Backing | Full faith and credit of the US | Full faith and credit of the US |
The two systems mirror each other deliberately. Whether your money sits in a bank or a credit union, the federal protection is equivalent.
How the $250,000 limit really works
The limit is per ownership category, not a single cap. A member could hold:
- a single (individual) account insured to $250,000, plus
- a share of a joint account insured to $250,000 per co-owner, plus
- a retirement account (such as an IRA) insured to $250,000,
all at the same credit union and all separately insured. See the full breakdown in our NCUA share insurance guide.
The bottom line
A federally insured credit union is as safe a place for insured deposits as a bank - while typically paying you more and charging you less. Always confirm a credit union is federally insured on ncua.gov.
General information, not financial advice. Insurance rules change - verify current details with the NCUA.