About the OCC

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) charters, regulates, and supervises all national banks. It also supervises the Federal branches and agencies of foreign banks. Headquartered in Washington, DC, the OCC has four district offices plus an office in London to supervise the international activities of national banks.

The OCC was established in 1863 as a bureau of the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The OCC is headed by the Comptroller, who is appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate, for a 5-year term. The Comptroller also serves as a director of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and a director of the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation.

The OCC's nationwide staff of examiners conducts onsite reviews of national banks and provides sustained supervision of bank operations. The agency issues rules, legal interpretations, and corporate decisions concerning banking, bank investments, bank community development activities, and other aspects of bank operations.

National bank examiners supervise domestic and international activities of national banks and perform corporate analyses. Examiners analyze a bank's loan and investment portfolios, funds management, capital, earnings, liquidity, sensitivity to market risk, and compliance with consumer banking laws, including the Community Reinvestment Act. They review the bank's internal controls, internal and external audits, and compliance with the law. They also evaluate the bank management's ability to identify and control risk.

In regulating national banks, the OCC has the power to—

The OCC's Objectives

The OCC's activities are predicated on four objectives that support its mission to ensure a stable and competitive national banking system:

History

In 1861, Secretary of the Treasury Salmon P. Chase recommended the establishment of a system of federally chartered national banks, each of which would have the power to issue standardized national banknotes based on United States bonds held by the bank. In the National Currency Act of 1863, the administration of the new national banking system was vested in the newly created OCC and its chief administrator, the Comptroller of the Currency.

The law was completely rewritten and reenacted as the National Bank Act. That act authorized the Comptroller of the Currency to hire a staff of national bank examiners to supervise and periodically examine national banks. The act also gave the Comptroller the authority to regulate lending and investment activities of national banks.

One of the reasons Congress created a banking system that issued national currency was to finance the Civil War. Although national banks no longer issue currency, they continue to play a prominent role in the nation's economic life. The OCC regulates and supervises about 1,600 national banks and 50 federal branches of foreign banks in the U.S., accounting for nearly two-thirds of the total assets of all U.S. commercial banks (as of September 30, 2009).

OCC Funding

The OCC does not receive any appropriations from Congress. Its operations are funded primarily by assessments on national banks. National banks pay for their examinations, and they pay the OCC for processing their corporate applications. The OCC also receives investment income, primarily from U.S. Treasury securities.

FDIC Insurance

The FDIC insures the deposits in all national banks. The standard insurance amount currently is $250,000 per depositor. The $250,000 limit is permanent for certain retirement accounts (includes IRAs) and is temporary for all other deposit accounts through December 31, 2013. On January 1, 2014, the standard insurance amount will return to $100,000 per depositor for all deposit accounts except certain retirement accounts, which will remain at $250,000 per depositor. For more, visit the FDIC.

Information About the OCC and Banking

You can learn more about what the OCC does (as well as what national banks are doing) by consulting the OCC's Web site (http://www.occ.gov). It contains the OCC's latest news releases, banking issuances, employment information, and publications. The Web site also has much more information, including the Weekly Bulletin of national banks' corporate applications, Community Reinvestment Act evaluations, the OCC's organizational directory, and forms and software.

Biographies of the OCC's key leaders are also available online.

By law, the OCC is prohibited from releasing information from its bank safety and soundness examinations to the public. However, national banks must submit a Report of Condition and Income (call report) four times a year to the FDIC. Call reports contain publicly available financial information about the bank. The FDIC makes these reports available upon request by phone (202-898-6570) and on the Web (http://www.fdic.gov/bank/index.html).

If you have a complaint about a national bank and cannot resolve it with the bank, contact the OCC Customer Assistance Group at 1-800-613-6743. Or, visit our Customer Assistance Group online for more information.

OCC Equal Employment Opportunity

On September 19, 2005, the Comptroller issued an equal employment opportunity policy statement, reaffirming the OCC's commitment to diversity, equal employment opportunity, and fair and unbiased treatment. The OCC is committed to ensuring that the workplace maintains the highest standard of integrity and professionalism and is free from discrimination, harassment, and reprisal. See our Equal Employment Opportunity Web site.

Minority Affairs

Recognizing the important role that minority-owned banks play in addressing financial services needs in the minority and low-income communities they serve, the OCC is committed to encouraging the success of these banks. For more information on minority-owned banks, visit our Minority Affairs page.

OCC Alumni

The OCC has more than 143 years of tradition and a rich history. Over the years, thousands of OCC alumni have made valuable contributions to America's national banking system and have gone on to make additional contributions in private industry and in other branches of the Federal Government. The OCC values its relationships with all of its alumni. The agency encourages former employees to stay informed and engaged by visiting OCC Alumni page.

HelpWithMyBank.gov Widgets

Help visitors to your site find answers to questions about banking and discover how to contact the OCC or file a complaint against a national bank by adding HelpWithMyBank.gov widgets to your site. Just cut and past the code from our widgets page into your site.

For more information about the OCC, contact:

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Communications Division
Washington, DC 20219
202-874-4700


Phone: 800-613-6743
TDD Number 713-658-0340
TTY: (800) 877-8339 (via a relay service)