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Guides

FDIC Advertising Rule: 2026 Guide for Banks and Fintechs

Updated June 2026 guide to FDIC advertising rules, Part 328, digital FDIC sign requirements, fintech-bank partner disclosures, false advertising, and FDIC logo misuse.

Luthor Team·Nov 3, 2025·Updated Jun 19, 2026·11 min read
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Contents
  • Quick Answer: What Does the FDIC Advertising Rule Require?
  • What is the FDIC Advertising Rule?
  • Overview of the FDIC's Role in Advertising
  • What You Need to Know About the Advertising Rule in 2026
  • How does the FDIC Address False Advertising?
  • Steps to Prevent Misrepresentation
  • Consequences for Misuse of the FDIC Logo
  • Disclosure Requirements for FDIC Insurance
  • What is FDIC Insurance Coverage?
  • How Does the Rule Affect Fintechs?
  • Why Partner-Bank Marketing Is Top of Mind in 2026
  • Policies and Procedures for Compliance
  • 2026 FDIC Advertising Review Checklist
  • Strategies for Better Compliance
  • FAQ
  • Final Thoughts

Article details

Written by
Luthor Team
Topic
Guides
Published
Nov 3, 2025
Last updated
Jun 19, 2026
Reviewed by
Luthor Team

Reviewed Jun 19, 2026 for source quality, practical relevance, and regulated-marketing context.

Article details

Written by
Luthor Team
Topic
Guides
Published
Nov 3, 2025
Last updated
Jun 19, 2026
Reviewed by
Luthor Team

Reviewed Jun 19, 2026 for source quality, practical relevance, and regulated-marketing context.

Updated June 19, 2026.

FDIC advertising compliance in 2026 is about more than placing "Member FDIC" in the right footer. Banks and fintech partners need to make clear who is insured, which products are deposits, what FDIC insurance does and does not cover, and when non-deposit products may lose value. That matters across websites, apps, ads, social posts, onboarding flows, ATMs, partner-bank disclosures, and affiliate or influencer copy.

The risk has grown with fintech, crypto, banking-as-a-service, and embedded finance. The FDIC has taken action against companies that implied FDIC protection where none existed, including a 2022 order directing five crypto companies to cease false FDIC-insurance claims. For fintechs working with sponsor banks, FDIC advertising compliance now overlaps heavily with partner marketing compliance, UDAAP review, and documented bank approval workflows.

This guide explains the FDIC advertising rule, the 2026 digital-sign update, what fintechs must disclose, and how banks should monitor third-party marketing.

Quick Answer: What Does the FDIC Advertising Rule Require?

The FDIC advertising rule, 12 C.F.R. Part 328, governs official FDIC signs, advertising statements, false advertising, misrepresentation of insured status, and misuse of the FDIC name or logo. In practical terms, the rule requires accurate use of FDIC references, clear separation between insured deposits and non-deposit products, disclosure when a fintech is not itself an FDIC-insured bank, and written bank policies for monitoring relevant third-party activity.

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What is the FDIC Advertising Rule?

The FDIC Advertising Rule refers to federal regulations (12 C.F.R. Part 328) that governs how the FDIC's name, logo, and deposit insurance claims can be used in marketing. Section 18(a)(4) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act makes it illegal for any person to falsely represent an uninsured product as FDIC-insured or misuse "FDIC" in company advertising.

In practice, this means only FDIC-insured depository institutions can advertise FDIC insurance, and even they must follow strict guidelines. The rule was recently updated to "modernize" these requirements for today's digital banking environment.

Overview of the FDIC's Role in Advertising

For decades, the FDIC's role has been to instill public confidence by regulating banks' communications about deposit insurance. Since 1934, the FDIC's official sign has been displayed at bank teller windows as a symbol that deposits are backed by the U.S. government.

The FDIC mandates that every FDIC-insured bank branch prominently show this sign and include an official statement (like "Member FDIC") in advertisements, so consumers know their money is protected.

By overseeing advertising and signage, the FDIC helps customers clearly identify when they are dealing with a legitimate insured institution versus a company that is not FDIC-backed.

What You Need to Know About the Advertising Rule in 2026

Businessman reviewing a laptop with an FDIC compliance checklist displayed on a large screen behind him

The FDIC finalized a rule in Dec. 2023 to update and clarify Part 328. In Jan. 2026, the FDIC issued another final rule addressing implementation issues for digital deposit-taking channels, ATMs, and like devices. The 2026 rule gives insured depository institutions more flexibility while preserving the core goal: helping consumers understand when they are dealing with an insured bank and when their funds are protected by FDIC deposit insurance.

  • Digital FDIC signage: Banks must display the FDIC official digital sign on specified digital deposit-taking surfaces. The 2026 final rule streamlines where the sign appears, including the homepage, login page, and first page of the deposit account opening process.
  • ATMs and like devices: The 2026 final rule narrows digital sign and non-deposit signage requirements for ATMs and similar devices and allows more devices to use a physical FDIC official sign rather than the digital sign.
  • Disclosures for uninsured products: Banks are required to use signage that clearly distinguishes FDIC-insured deposits from non-deposit products. When insured and uninsured products appear together, banks must disclose that non-deposit products "may lose value" and are not FDIC-insured.
  • Third-Party Requirements: Banks must establish written policies and procedures to guarantee compliance, including monitoring any third-party fintech partners who offer deposit products on the bank's behalf.

The 2023 amendments took effect on April 1, 2024. The FDIC later postponed compliance for Sections 328.4 and 328.5 to March 1, 2026 while leaving other amendments on the May 1, 2025 timeline. The FDIC's Part 328 Q&A, updated May 13, 2026, now notes that the 2026 amended digital-sign and ATM provisions have an April 1, 2027 compliance date.

Purpose of the Rule in Preventing Misuse

The driving purpose behind these updated rules is to prevent false claims about deposit insurance that could harm consumers and erode trust in the banking system. The FDIC observed that new fintech channels have led to an "increase in misleading representations" about deposit insurance online.

If people mistakenly believe their money is FDIC-insured when it isn't, they could take on risks unaware. FDIC officials warn that unchecked misuse could undermine public confidence in legitimate banks.

How does the FDIC Address False Advertising?

Legal gavel beside FDIC logo and bank icon with violation, penalty, and cease and desist documents

The FDIC has several tools to crack down on false advertising. It is authorized by law to take enforcement action against any person or company that misrepresents FDIC coverage.

In practice, the FDIC often issues cease-and-desist letters as a first step. For example, in early 2023 the FDIC sent letters to a crypto exchange (CEX.IO) and a fintech (Zera Financial) ordering them to immediately stop making false claims that their crypto products were FDIC-insured.

If a company refuses to comply, the FDIC can escalate to formal enforcement, which may include monetary penalties or legal injunctions.

Identifying False Advertising Practices

The new rule outlines what counts as false or misleading advertising. A few clear red flags include:

  • Using "FDIC" or the logo in a non-bank's marketing: If a company that is not an insured bank uses the FDIC name or logo in ads in a way that suggests its own products are insured, that's a misrepresentation (unless the ad clearly names the actual insured bank involved).
  • Omitting disclosures: The FDIC now calls it a "material omission" if a non-bank talks about deposit insurance but fails to disclose that the company itself is not FDIC-insured and that FDIC protection applies only if an FDIC-insured bank fails.
  • Other prohibited practices include mixing insured and uninsured products in an advertisement without proper disclaimers, or falsely suggesting that crypto accounts have FDIC coverage.

Steps to Prevent Misrepresentation

Financial institutions and fintech companies need to take proactive steps to avoid misrepresentation of FDIC insurance:

  1. Provide clear disclosures whenever deposit insurance is mentioned. If a fintech offers "FDIC-insured accounts" through a bank, it must "clearly disclose" that it is not itself FDIC-insured.
  2. Implement internal checks and training. The FDIC now requires banks to have written procedures to guarantee compliance, including oversight of third parties promoting their deposit products.
  3. Institute robust compliance policies, regular audits of marketing content, and upfront disclaimers (like labeling crypto accounts "Not FDIC Insured").

Consequences for Misuse of the FDIC Logo

The consequences for misusing the FDIC logo can be severe. At a minimum, the FDIC will issue cease-and-desist orders, as seen with FTX US in 2022 - the crypto exchange was ordered to halt "false and misleading" claims that its users' funds were FDIC insured.

Beyond remedial actions, there are legal penalties. Federal law actually makes it a criminal offense to misuse the FDIC's name. While criminal prosecution is rare, violations can lead to fines or imprisonment. More commonly, the FDIC could impose civil penalties if an entity refuses to comply.

Those who misuse the FDIC logo risk regulatory enforcement, reputational damage, monetary fines, and legal jeopardy. The FDIC has warned that false claims left unchecked could undermine confidence and will not be tolerated.

Disclosure Requirements for FDIC Insurance

Businessman holding a flagged FDIC accuracy matters sign with a warning triangle in an office

Strict disclosure requirements are in place to make sure consumers know when their deposits are protected:

  • FDIC-insured banks must include an "official statement" (such as "Member FDIC") in advertisements that reference deposits.
  • Non-bank entities that mention FDIC insurance must clearly state that they are not banks and only the partner bank provides insurance.
  • When banks list both insured deposits and uninsured products together, they must include a disclaimer that non-deposit products "are not FDIC insured".

The FDIC logo should only be displayed in connection with actual insured deposit-taking. These disclosure rules help consumers distinguish insured from uninsured offerings.

What is FDIC Insurance Coverage?

FDIC deposit insurance has specific limits that consumers must understand. By law, the FDIC insures deposits up to $250,000 per depositor, per insured bank, per ownership category. This means if you have accounts at one bank, their balances are summed and insured up to $250K total.

Importantly, FDIC insurance only covers traditional deposit products at FDIC-insured banks - it does not cover investments like stocks, bonds, mutual funds, crypto assets, or other non-deposit items.

Many consumers don't fully realize this distinction. Money kept in a payment app or crypto exchange isn't protected if the company fails. In early 2023, collapses of firms like FTX revealed that some customers thought their funds were safe but lost access to hundreds of millions of dollars because those were not bank deposits.

How Does the Rule Affect Fintechs?

The FDIC's advertising rule explicitly extends to fintechs, crypto companies, neobanks, and other non-bank institutions. This is important because these players have boomed in recent years - nearly half of U.S. households were using non-bank online payment services as of 2021.

The new rule means fintechs must be careful in how they talk about FDIC insurance. Many fintech apps partner with FDIC-insured banks to hold customer deposits - under the rule, the app can advertise deposits that are FDIC-insured only if they name the partner bank and make clear the fintech itself isn't the insurer.

This greatly impacts the "Banking-as-a-Service" market, where fintech brands offer accounts backed by chartered banks. The rule seeks to eliminate ambiguity about who provides insurance. Consumers currently hold "billions of dollars" in funds on non-bank payment apps, and many might mistakenly believe all their app-held funds are government-insured.

Some fintechs are already adding disclaimers on their websites and marketing materials. Others, especially crypto firms that previously touted pseudo-insurance, are having to stop making such representations altogether.

Given the size of the fintech sector, this change helps to increase trust - users will still enjoy fintech convenience but with clearer ideas about their protections.

Why Partner-Bank Marketing Is Top of Mind in 2026

FDIC advertising rules are not the only risk in bank-fintech marketing, but they sit at the center of the consumer trust problem. When an app, card program, wallet, cash-management product, or rewards account depends on a bank partner, the marketing has to explain the relationship without implying broader protection than the law provides.

Recent consumer-finance developments show why this matters:

  • In June 2026, the CFPB said it was monitoring remediation for consumers affected by Bilt's transition to a new bank partner. The update was about consumer harm from a partner-bank transition, not FDIC advertising specifically, but it shows why bank-partner changes need clear customer communications and issue tracking.
  • In 2025, the CFPB amended its Wise order after claims that included inaccurate fee advertising and disclosure issues in mobile financial services. That case was not an FDIC-insurance case either, but it reinforces the broader rule for fintech marketing: app-based claims about money movement, fees, account features, and protections must be precise.

For bank-fintech programs, FDIC, UDAAP, deposit, card, payments, and partner-oversight review should happen before launch, not after creative is finished. The safest workflow is documented dual review: the fintech proves the claim is accurate, the bank approves any use of its name or FDIC status, and both sides retain the final artifact.

Policies and Procedures for Compliance

Two professionals discussing at a table with FDIC displayed on a large screen and data visualizations

To comply with the FDIC's Advertising Rule, financial institutions are making both front-end and back-end changes to their compliance programs.

The FDIC now requires all insured banks to establish written policies and procedures to make sure they follow Part 328. This means banks must document how they will display signs, use the FDIC logo, and review materials for compliance.

If a bank uses third parties like fintech partners, those policies must include provisions to "monitor and evaluate" those partners regarding FDIC insurance representations. Banks need an internal playbook for policing misuse of the FDIC name both internally and in collaborations with non-banks.

U.S. prudential regulators have signaled that banks should integrate checks for FDIC logo misuse into their regular compliance controls. For example, a compliance officer might periodically scan the bank's fintech partner websites to see if the FDIC logo is only where it should be.

Many banks and fintechs are forming joint oversight committees to review marketing language. The rule creates a culture of accountability: banks will hold their marketing departments and partners to these standards, and non-banks know their bank partners and the FDIC are watching.

The FDIC provided a Q&A guidance document to clarify common questions. By embedding these requirements into formal policies, the industry can systematically prevent infractions.

2026 FDIC Advertising Review Checklist

Before approving any deposit, card, wallet, cash-management, or bank-partner campaign, reviewers should confirm:

  • The consumer can tell whether they are dealing with a bank or a non-bank fintech.
  • Any use of "Member FDIC," the FDIC logo, or FDIC-associated language is tied to the insured depository institution, not the non-bank brand.
  • The ad names the partner bank when deposit insurance is referenced.
  • The copy explains that FDIC insurance protects against failure of the insured bank, not failure of the fintech, fraud, unauthorized transactions, market losses, or operational outages.
  • Non-deposit products are clearly identified as not FDIC-insured, not deposits, and subject to potential loss where applicable.
  • Any pass-through insurance claim is qualified and does not imply automatic coverage unless the legal conditions are satisfied.
  • App screens, onboarding pages, emails, paid ads, social posts, affiliates, and influencer copy use the same approved disclosure logic.
  • The bank and fintech both retain the final asset, reviewer notes, approval timestamps, and post-publication monitoring evidence.

Strategies for Better Compliance

Banks, fintechs, and crypto companies have been developing strategies to improve compliance with the FDIC's rules. Industry experts recommend several key actions:

  1. Reinforce Compliance Programs: Non-bank fintechs should strengthen their frameworks to specifically cover FDIC deposit insurance representations. This means implementing internal controls that flag potentially misleading statements before publication.
  2. Audit Customer-Facing Channels: Companies should conduct thorough reviews of all platforms - websites, apps, social media, emails - to check that FDIC references are correct. Creating an inventory of everywhere "FDIC" appears helps catch compliance risks and issues.
  3. Monitor Third-Party Compliance: Banks that partner with fintechs need stronger oversight routines. They should confirm compliance of partners by requiring approval of marketing materials and periodically auditing the partner's digital presence.
  4. Strengthen Internal Controls: Institutions are updating internal protocols to incorporate the new requirements. For example, adding checkpoints in product launch processes to verify FDIC signage rules are met before going live.
  5. Revise Formal Policies: Both banks and fintechs are rewriting policies to detail how they comply with the rule, including step-by-step procedures for addressing mistaken claims.

Many firms are also using third-party compliance consultants or tools that scan the internet for unauthorized use of a bank's name or logo.

The strategy is twofold: prevent problems through training and controls, and detect issues through monitoring and audits. This comprehensive approach not only avoids penalties but protects customers.

FAQ

What is the FDIC advertising rule?

The FDIC advertising rule is 12 C.F.R. Part 328. It governs official FDIC signs, advertising statements, false advertising, misrepresentation of insured status, and misuse of the FDIC name or logo. It applies to insured depository institutions and also clarifies what non-banks cannot imply when discussing deposit insurance.

Can a fintech say it is FDIC insured?

Usually no. A fintech that is not an insured depository institution should not say or imply that it is FDIC insured. If customer deposits are held at a partner bank, the fintech should clearly say it is not a bank, name the FDIC-insured bank, and explain the limits of deposit insurance.

What is the FDIC digital sign compliance date in 2026?

The FDIC's May 2026 Part 328 Q&A notes that amended provisions for the FDIC official digital sign and related signage on IDI websites, mobile apps, ATMs, and like devices have an April 1, 2027 compliance date. Other Part 328 amendments may have different compliance timing, so firms should map obligations by section.

Does FDIC insurance cover fintech app failure?

No. FDIC deposit insurance protects deposits if an FDIC-insured bank fails, up to applicable limits and ownership categories. It does not insure against the failure of a fintech company, operational outages, fraud, unauthorized transfers, market losses, crypto losses, or non-deposit investment losses.

What records should banks keep for FDIC advertising compliance?

Banks should retain approved marketing assets, review comments, partner approvals, final disclosures, version history, first-use dates, monitoring results, and remediation evidence for any bank, fintech, affiliate, or third-party campaign that references FDIC insurance, deposits, or the bank's insured status.

Final Thoughts

The FDIC Advertising Rule touches a fundamental issue: the public's knowledge of where their money is safe. By tightening misuse of the FDIC's name, regulators are strengthening financial security and reducing confusion in bank, fintech, and embedded-finance channels.

Regulatory scrutiny will only grow in fintech and banking - meeting these standards is now part of doing business in finance. Those who embrace compliance will thrive by earning customer confidence. Those who ignore it risk severe consequences in an environment where watchdogs are more alert than ever.

Staying up to date with FDIC advertising requirements can be difficult when campaigns move across bank websites, fintech apps, social channels, paid ads, affiliates, and partner-bank review queues. Luthor helps teams automatically review marketing assets for FDIC advertising, UDAAP, and related financial-marketing risks before content goes live.

Instead of manually reviewing each piece of marketing collateral or worrying about whether fintech partners are representing FDIC status correctly, teams can use AI-assisted review, documented approvals, and post-publication monitoring to reduce risk at scale.

Request demo access to see how we can help your organization maintain FDIC advertising compliance while streamlining your marketing review process.

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