Amounts Under Regulation CC For Making Check Deposits Available To Customers To Increase As Of July 1, 2025

The Federal Reserve Board and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (jointly, the "Agencies") have amended Regulation CC, the regulation that requires depository institutions.

United States Consumer Protection

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The Federal Reserve Board and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (jointly, the "Agencies") have amended Regulation CC, the regulation that requires depository institutions to make funds from check deposits available to customers within certain timeframes. The amendments, which take effect on July 1, 2025, increase certain dollar amounts based on changes in inflation and will require depository institutions to make certain system changes and issue change-in-terms notices to customers.

I. Background

Regulation CC requires depository institutions to make funds from checks deposited by a customer available for use by the customer within specified time frames. The amounts and timing for making these funds available vary depending on the type of check and how it is deposited.

The Dodd-Frank Act of 2011 provided for adjustments to the amounts that must be made available for check deposits under Regulation CC every five years based on increases in the Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners and Clerical Workers ("CPI-W"), with such amounts rounded to the nearest multiple of $25. The Agencies are continuing to implement this requirement by scheduling the next adjustment for July 1, 2025.

II. Adjustments

The Agencies have calculated adjustments to various amounts under Regulation CC based on changes in the CPI-W. Among the changes that will take effect as of July 1, 2025 are the following:

These new amounts will be adjusted again as of July 1, 2030, and then every five years thereafter. The Agencies intend to publish the new amounts one year in advance of each adjustment date.

III. Customer Notice

Since Regulation CC requires an institution to notify customers of changes in the institution's availability policy, these changes to the availability amounts require institutions to send a change-in-terms notice to deposit customers. Regulation CC requires such a notice at least 30 days before a change in the availability policy, except that a change that expedites availability may be made not later than 30 days after the change is implemented. Because the changes being made here expedite the availability of funds (i.e., they make more money available to the consumer sooner), the notice for these changes can be provided to the consumer not later than 30 days after the effective date.

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