Title 12 › Chapter CHAPTER 32— - FOREIGN BANK PARTICIPATION IN DOMESTIC MARKETS › § 3103
Allows a foreign bank to open and run a Federal or State branch or agency in a U.S. State other than its home State, but only after getting written approval. For a Federal branch the bank must get approval from the Board of Governors and the Comptroller of the Currency. For a State branch the bank must get approval from the Board and the State bank supervisor. Approving officials must use the same standards they use for similar U.S. banks. They must find the foreign bank’s finances and capital are equal to what a U.S. bank would need and must consult the Secretary of the Treasury about capital equivalency. They may require the foreign bank to set up a domestic bank subsidiary in the United States if that is needed to verify capital or meet U.S. rules. States can block or limit openings, and branches may be limited to certain kinds of deposits (the same limits that apply to a corporation under section 25A of the Federal Reserve Act). Agencies can be upgraded to branches if the State allows it and if the agency was operating before September 29, 1994 or meets the State’s age rule. If a foreign bank buys a bank or branch that is a covered financial institution, the Community Reinvestment Act still applies to the acquired branch. A foreign bank may not otherwise open branches outside its home State. Home State means the State of the main office for a national bank or the chartering State for a State bank, and a foreign bank with offices in more than one State may pick its home State (or the Board will pick one). Controlling a U.S. bank does not change these rules for either the foreign bank or the U.S. subsidiary.
Full Legal Text
Banks and Banking — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
12 U.S.C. § 3103
Title 12 — Banks and Banking
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73