Brokers' Safety Net Stays Flat at $250K Amid Inflation
Published Date: 3/31/2026
Notice
Summary
The Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) has decided to keep the maximum cash advance amount at $250,000 for customers starting January 1, 2027, and for the next five years. This means no inflation increase for now, so customers can expect the same protection amount if their brokerage fails. The Securities and Exchange Commission approved this decision after no one objected during the comment period.
Analyzed Economic Effects
3 provisions identified: 2 benefits, 1 costs, 0 mixed.
SIPC cash-claim protection stays $250,000
If you have a brokerage account, the Securities Investor Protection Corporation (SIPC) will keep the standard maximum cash advance amount at $250,000 per customer starting January 1, 2027, and for the five-year period after that. SIPC stated that applying the inflation formula would have increased the amount by $100,000 to $350,000, but the Board decided not to make that adjustment.
Decision reduces chance of higher SIPC member assessments
If you run or own a broker-dealer that is a SIPC member, SIPC said not raising the standard maximum cash advance amount should minimize the potential for unnecessary increases to assessments on members. The Commission approved the Board's decision after the public comment period.
Parity with FDIC deposit insurance retained
SIPC kept its $250,000 cash-advance limit equal to the FDIC's standard maximum deposit insurance amount to avoid creating a divergence that could encourage people to hold cash at broker-dealers instead of banks. The Board said maintaining parity is in the public interest.
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