Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION › § 1831u
Allows a federal agency to OK mergers of banks from different states starting June 1, 1997, even if a State law would otherwise ban the deal. But a State law passed after September 29, 1994 and before June 1, 1997 that applies equally to all out-of-State banks and clearly bans such mergers will block approval. Mergers could be approved earlier if every bank’s home State already had a law, at the time of approval, that applies equally to out-of-State banks and clearly allows interstate mergers. A host State can set non‑discriminatory, non‑preempted conditions on branches created by a merger, but those conditions cannot require anything after May 31, 1997. A branch-only purchase is allowed only if the host State law permits buying a branch without buying the whole bank, and that branch counts as a bank located in that State. The agency must follow filing rules in the host State that don’t discriminate and are like rules for other out‑of‑state companies, and applicants must send a copy to the host State bank supervisor. The merged bank cannot control more than 10 percent of U.S. insured deposits, and it cannot, when banks overlap in a State, control 30 percent or more of that State’s deposits. The agency must find each bank adequately capitalized at filing and the resulting bank well capitalized and well managed at closing. The agency may waive some rules if the merger involves a failing bank or one getting federal help. States keep their tax and antitrust powers and may require nondiscriminatory reporting by branches. Banks formed only to buy another bank are treated as having the same age as the bank they buy. Special rules apply about maximum interest rates in States with a constitutional cap; nonbanks or governments in such States may be subject to the greater of the State cap or 17 percent for certain federal programs and commerce. Definitions (short): "adequately capitalized" = meaning in section 1831o; "branch" = a domestic branch; "home State" = where a national bank’s main office is or where a State bank is chartered; "host State" = a State other than the home State where a bank has or wants a branch; "interstate merger transaction" = a merger approved under the rule described above; "out‑of‑State bank" = a bank whose home State is a different State; "responsible agency" = the federal agency named in section 1828(c)(2) that decides the merger; "resulting bank" = the bank that exists after the interstate merger.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 1831u
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73