
Millions of consumers had the Capital One 360 Savings account for years, and it did, for the most part, what savings accounts are meant to do. Individuals opened them, established direct deposits, observed their balances increasing, and believed the bank was paying them at the current going rate. Most didn’t give it much thought. It turns out that this lawsuit is solely based on that trust.
In late April, a $425 million class action settlement was approved by a federal judge in Virginia, capping a roughly two-year battle that revealed an odd division within one of the most well-known banks in the United States. The case concerned 360 Savings and 360 Performance Savings, two products that were nearly identical on paper but paid noticeably more interest. At one point, there was a noticeable difference between the older account’s roughly 0.3% and the newer account’s over 4%. Later, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau reported that the rate disparity was more than fourteen times at its largest.
| Capital One Class Action Settlement — Key Facts | Details |
|---|---|
| Defendant | Capital One Financial Corp. |
| Settlement Amount | $425 million |
| Case Name | In re: Capital One 360 Savings Account Interest Rate Litigation |
| Case Number | 1:24-md-03111-DJN |
| Court | U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia |
| Final Approval Date | April 20, 2026 |
| Class Period | September 18, 2019 – June 16, 2025 |
| Eligible Account | 360 Savings (not 360 Performance Savings) |
| Expected Payment Date | Around July 27, 2026 |
| Claim Form Required? | No — payments are automatic |
| Payment Method Deadline | March 30, 2026 (for electronic option) |
| Plaintiffs’ Counsel | Wolf Popper LLP |
| Underlying Allegation | The bank kept old account rates low while paying higher rates on a near-identical newer product |
The settlement explicitly states that Capital One denies any wrongdoing. The bank was never found guilty by the court. However, consenting to write a check this size seldom conveys confidence in your own defense. Reading the filings gives the impression that the bank just wanted the commotion to stop, and that the plaintiffs, who claimed that customers had collectively lost out on about $2 billion in interest, were so close to the truth that protracted litigation posed a risk of its own.
The story has gone viral on the internet in part because the payout mechanics are remarkably straightforward. It is automatically available to anyone who had a 360 Savings account between September 18, 2019, and June 16, 2025. No form for a claim. There was no paperwork piled on the kitchen tables. A paper check will arrive in the mail if your portion of the fund is $5 or more and you did not select an electronic payment by March 30. It’s difficult to ignore the difference with the majority of class actions, where over half of the eligible parties forfeit money owed due to the burden of filing.
The question that no one can clearly answer is how much each person actually receives. Individual payments are determined by subtracting what you would have earned in the higher-yielding sibling product over the same period from what your 360 Savings account paid. Before a single envelope is sealed, legal fees, which are limited to 15%, and administrative expenses—possibly $63 million or more—come out first. The check might be small for someone who saved a few thousand dollars in a 360 Savings account for a year or two. It might have greater significance for seasoned savers with balances of five or six figures.
The larger narrative seems familiar. The idea that consumers won’t move their money, won’t read rate disclosures, and won’t notice the cousin product paying twice as much down the hall is a kind of customer inertia that banks have long relied on. As this case develops, it’s easy to interpret it as a minor correction to that presumption. By Wall Street standards, the settlement isn’t huge. However, July might bring a quiet, unexpected vindication for the customer who logged in one afternoon, shrugged, and saw 0.3% next to their balance. It remains to be seen if it influences anyone’s future savings account purchasing decisions.

