A bank works for shareholders. A neobank works for its VCs. A credit union works for you — because the people who use it own it. No billionaires skimming the top. Just a co-op that hands the profit back.
Who actually gets the profit you generate?
Industry averages; a neobank has no dividend structure at all. Real rates vary — the matcher shows each CU's actual numbers.
“Isn't it hard to join?” Nope. You usually qualify by where you live, work, study, or worship — and most places have a community CU anyone can join. We'll find yours in ~30 seconds.
one's a landlord. one's a co-op.
you already know which side you're on.
Location unlocks community credit unions near you. We don't store this.
Tap all that apply — each one opens more doors. Skip if none fit.
Sorted by app quality + rates. All confirmed eligible for you.
Everything your neobank has. Yes, really.
And ATM fee rebates up to $20/mo.
Federal insurance — same safety as FDIC.
Not a shareholder buyback in sight.
Your $5 share makes you a part-owner of Alliant — with a vote. Your money now works for your community.
We pre-filled the annoying parts. Check them off whenever.
No sales pitch — just the math and the mechanics of owning your bank instead of renting from one.
A credit union is a cooperative — a not-for-profit owned by the people who use it. There are no outside shareholders. No private equity firm. No founder to make rich. When you join, you're not a customer, you're a part-owner.
A billionaire and a barista who each hold an account get the exact same vote. Try getting that at Chase. Power here is per-person, not per-dollar.
Same banking. Same deposits, loans, and cards. The only difference is who the machine is built to enrich. At a bank, it's the owners of capital. At a CU, the workers and members who bank there are the owners.
Atomic Credit Union in Ohio runs ~100 branches staffed by 900 student volunteers — kids literally running their own democratic bank. Cooperative finance is older, bigger, and more stable than the fintech that wants your paycheck.
Same money, three institutions, one year. Drag it and watch who works for whom.
Illustrative national-average rates. Real rates vary — the matcher shows each CU's actual numbers.
The stuff a neobank structurally can't offer — because it isn't actually a lender.
Small, secured loans designed to build your score from zero.
Chime-style apps can't underwrite thisOften $0 minimum, $0 monthly fee — and a real human to call when something breaks.
Typically 1–2 points lower than a bank, underwritten by someone who'll explain the terms.
Member-priced refi once you're employed and your credit's grown up a little.
“Didn't know I qualified through my university until I ran the match tool. My savings rate is nearly 10× my old bank.”
“Got a credit-builder loan when my score was basically nonexistent. My old fintech app couldn't even offer that.”
Illustrative examples for this concept — replace with real member stories before launch.
The old knock on CUs was clunky tech. In 2026 the good ones match the fintechs feature-for-feature — you just stop funding a billionaire to use it.
| feature | 🏦 bank | 📱 fintech | 🤝 CU |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slick mobile app | ~ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Early direct deposit | ✕ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Zelle / instant pay | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Apple / Google Pay | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Budgeting tools | ~ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Fee-free ATM network | ~ | ~ | ✓ |
| Shared branch network | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Talk to a real human | ~ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Federally insured | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| You own it | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Profit comes to you | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
| Can't be sold to PE | ✕ | ✕ | ✓ |
A fintech is insured only through a partner bank — and can pivot, freeze accounts, or get acquired overnight. A credit union can't be bought by a private equity firm, because there's nothing to buy. You already own it.
No compliance-speak. Real answers.
Isn't this for old people?+
The structure is old — cooperative banking is 100+ years deep. The tech doesn't have to be. Plenty of CUs now ship apps as good as any fintech, and we only route you to the good ones.
Can I even join? Don't you need a special job?+
Usually no. You typically qualify by where you live, work, study, or worship — and most areas have a community CU anyone can join for a one-time ~$5 share. That $5 is your ownership stake, not a fee.
Is my money actually safe? Is it FDIC insured?+
It's insured by the NCUA up to $250,000 — a federal agency, same protection level as FDIC, just a different name. Backed by the U.S. government, full stop.
What's this "share" thing? Is it a hidden fee?+
No. A share is a small deposit (usually $5–$25) that makes you a part-owner with a vote. It's still your money, sitting in your account. It's the opposite of a fee — it's equity.
Will the app suck? Do they have Zelle and Apple Pay?+
Varies by CU — so we score each one's app honestly and tell you before you join. The ones we recommend have Zelle, Apple/Google Pay, mobile deposit, and early direct deposit. See the tech showdown.
Do I have to leave my bank or Chime completely?+
Nope. Start by moving your direct deposit or opening a savings account. Most people your age run a few accounts anyway — this just makes one of them work for you instead of a shareholder.
Are the rates really better, or is that marketing?+
Because CUs are not-for-profit, surplus goes back to members as higher savings APYs and lower loan rates. Credit-card APRs are even federally capped at 18% for CUs — banks routinely charge 24%+. Run the $1,000 test.
Why should I care where my money sits?+
Because a deposit isn't idle — the institution lends it out. At a bank it funds buybacks and executive bonuses. At a CU it funds your neighbor's first car loan and a member's small business. Same money, different politics.
How long does joining take?+
Most let you open an account online in about 10 minutes. We hand you a switch kit for moving direct deposit and recurring payments so you don't have to think about it.