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Plaid Supported Banks: 9,697+ Institutions (2026)

Full list of 9,697 banks supported by Plaid. Search all financial institutions, check API coverage, and verify if your bank works with Plaid. Updated January 2026.

9697 banks tracked

Based on Open Banking Tracker data. Actual coverage may be higher.

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What is Plaid?

Plaid is a financial technology company that builds the infrastructure connecting applications to users' bank accounts. Founded in 2013 by Zach Perret and William Hockey, Plaid provides APIs that enable thousands of fintech applications to securely access financial data.

What is Plaid used for? In banking and fintech, Plaid is used for account linking, identity verification, balance checks, transaction history, and payment initiation. When you use apps like Venmo, Robinhood, Coinbase, or Chime, there's a good chance Plaid is working behind the scenes to connect your bank account. The company acts as a secure intermediary, allowing apps to verify account ownership, check balances, and access transaction history without ever seeing your bank login credentials.

Plaid supports over 12,000 financial institutions across the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, and Europe. In 2021, Plaid was valued at $13.4 billion, making it one of the most valuable private fintech companies globally.

Is Plaid Safe?

Yes, Plaid is considered safe and employs bank-level security measures to protect user data. Here's why security experts generally trust Plaid:

Encryption & Security Standards

  • 256-bit AES encryption for data at rest
  • TLS encryption for data in transit
  • SOC 2 Type II certified
  • Regular third-party security audits and penetration testing

Regulatory Compliance

  • PSD2 compliant in Europe (licensed AISP/PISP)
  • Registered with FinCEN in the United States
  • GDPR compliant for European users
  • CCPA compliant for California residents

How Plaid Protects Your Credentials

When you enter your bank login through Plaid, your credentials are encrypted and never shared with the third-party app you're using. Plaid connects directly to your bank, authenticates your identity, and returns only the specific data the app requested (with your permission).

Consumer Protections

Plaid provides a consumer portal (my.plaid.com) where you can view all apps connected to your accounts and revoke access at any time. You maintain full control over your data.

Is it safe to give Plaid my bank login? Yes. When you enter your credentials in Plaid Link, they are encrypted and used only to establish a one-time connection with your bank. Plaid does not store your password after authentication. The app you're using receives only a secure token—never your login details.

How Does Plaid Work?

Plaid works by creating a secure bridge between your bank account and the apps you use. Here's the step-by-step process:

1. You Initiate a Connection

When you click "Connect Bank Account" in an app, you're presented with Plaid Link—a secure interface that handles the authentication process.

2. You Authenticate with Your Bank

You select your bank and enter your credentials directly in Plaid's secure environment. For banks that support it, Plaid uses OAuth, redirecting you to your bank's own login page.

3. Plaid Verifies Your Identity

Plaid connects to your bank's systems (via API or secure data access) and verifies your identity. Multi-factor authentication may be required.

4. Data is Securely Retrieved

Once authenticated, Plaid retrieves only the data types you've authorized—such as account numbers, balances, or transaction history.

5. Tokenized Access

The app receives a secure token, not your credentials. This token allows the app to request updated data through Plaid without you logging in again.

Plaid's Products

  • Auth: Verify account ownership and retrieve account/routing numbers
  • Transactions: Access categorized transaction history
  • Identity: Retrieve account holder information
  • Balance: Check real-time account balances
  • Investments: Access investment account data
  • Liabilities: Retrieve loan and credit card information

For a comprehensive technical guide on integrating with Plaid and other providers, see our [Open Banking API guide](/open-banking-api).

Apps and Products That Use Plaid

Many popular apps and services use Plaid to link your bank account. If an app asks you to "connect with Plaid" or shows the Plaid logo during sign-up, it uses Plaid for verification or data access.

Payment and money apps

  • Venmo – Uses Plaid to link your bank for transfers and instant verification.
  • Cash App – Uses Plaid to connect your bank for adding cash and withdrawals.
  • PayPal – Some PayPal flows use Plaid for bank linking and verification.
  • Zelle – Implementations vary by bank; some partner apps may use Plaid for account linking.

Investing and crypto

  • Robinhood, Coinbase, Kraken – Use Plaid for bank linking and instant verification.
  • Acorns, Betterment, Wealthfront – Use Plaid to connect accounts for funding and aggregation.

Neobanks and banking apps

  • Chime, Varo, Current, Dave – Use Plaid for external account linking and transfers.
  • Brigit, Earnin, Cleo, MoneyLion – Cash advance and budgeting apps often use Plaid to verify income and account access.

Business and accounting

  • QuickBooks, Xero, FreshBooks – Use Plaid (or alternatives like MX) for bank feeds.
  • Bill.com, Melio – Use Plaid for vendor and bank verification.

How to check if your app uses Plaid

When you tap "Connect Bank" or "Link Account," look for the Plaid name or logo on the connection screen. You can also see and manage all Plaid connections at [my.plaid.com](https://my.plaid.com).

For a full list of banks that work with Plaid, see the [Plaid supported banks](#supported-banks) table above.

What is the Plaid API?

The Plaid API is a set of developer interfaces that let applications securely connect to users' bank accounts, retrieve account and transaction data, verify identity, and initiate payments.

What is the Plaid API used for?

  • Auth – Verify account ownership and retrieve account and routing numbers (e.g. for ACH).
  • Transactions – Pull categorized transaction history for budgeting and analytics.
  • Identity – Retrieve account-holder information for KYC and verification.
  • Balance – Get real-time account balances.
  • Investments – Access investment and brokerage account data.
  • Liabilities – Retrieve loan and credit card data.

How to use the Plaid API

Developers integrate Plaid Link (the consumer-facing connection flow) and Plaid's backend APIs. After a user connects their bank through Link, your server uses the returned token to call Plaid's APIs for the data you need. Plaid provides SDKs for multiple languages and a [developer portal and documentation](https://plaid.com/docs) including sandbox environments.

Is Plaid an API? Plaid is a company and platform; the "Plaid API" refers to the HTTP APIs and SDKs they offer. For a technical overview of open banking APIs and how aggregators like Plaid fit in, see our [Open Banking API guide](/open-banking-api) and [financial account aggregation](/financial-account-aggregation) overview.

Plaid Pricing

Plaid operates on a B2B model—consumers don't pay to use Plaid when linking accounts. Businesses pay based on API usage.

For Consumers

Free. You'll never be charged for connecting your bank account through Plaid.

For Developers & Businesses

Plaid uses usage-based pricing. While exact costs aren't publicly listed, here's the general structure:

  • Pay-as-you-go: Per-API-call pricing for production use
  • Enterprise: Custom pricing for high-volume users

Typical Cost Ranges (based on industry reports):

  • Auth verification: $0.30 - $0.50 per verification
  • Transaction data: $0.10 - $0.30 per account/month
  • Identity verification: $1.00 - $2.00 per verification

Getting Started

Developers can sign up for free at plaid.com/docs and access sandbox environments to test integrations before going live.

#Plaid Supported Banks (9,697)

Showing 100 of 9,697 banks tracked

View All 9,697 Banks
NameMarketsDeveloper PortalSandboxAISPISAPIsView
 Cardinal Credit Union
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 Mutual Credit Union
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 Soarion Credit Union
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 Stone Bank
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167th TFR Credit Union
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1Advisor
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1BY by OneAZ Credit Union
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1NB Bank
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1Source Business Solutions
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1st Advantage Bank
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1st Advantage Federal Credit Union
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1st Bank (Broadus, MT) - Personal
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1st Bank in Hominy
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1st Bank of Sea Isle City - Business
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1st Bank of Sea Isle City - Personal
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1st Bank of Wyoming
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1st Bergen Federal Credit Union
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1st Capital Bank (California) - Business
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1st Capital Bank (California) - Personal
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1st Century Bank - Express Banking - Personal
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1st Century Bank - Online Banking Business
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1st Colonial Community Bank
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1st Community Bank
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1st Community Bank (IL) - Personal
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1st Community Colonial Bank - Mobile Banking
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1st Community Credit Union
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1st Cooperative Federal Credit Union
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1st Gateway Credit Union
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1st Global - MyStreetscape
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1st Liberty Federal Credit Union
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1st MidAmerica Credit Union
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1st Mississippi Federal Credit Union
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1st National Bank
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1st National Bank of Scotia
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1st Security Bank of Deer Lodge
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1st Security Bank of Washington
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1st Source Bank - BBO Treasury
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1st Source Bank - Personal Online Banking
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1st Source Bank - Retirement Plan Services
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1st State Bank
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1st State Bank of Mason City
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1st State Bank of Purdy
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1st Street Credit Union
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1st Summit Bank
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1st Trust Bank
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1st United Bank (MN) - Personal
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1st United Services Credit Union
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1st University CU
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1st Valley Credit Union
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2 Rivers Area Credit Union
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21st Century Bank
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22nd State Bank - Consumer/Small Business
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360 Federal Credit Union
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42 North Private - Online Banking
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44 North Credit Union
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49er FCU - Investments
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4Front Credit Union
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4U CREDIT UNION
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5 Point Credit Union
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5 Star Bank
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717 Credit Union
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802 Credit Union
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8th Bank of Northern Connecticut
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A.R. SCHMEIDLER AND COMPANY
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A&A Employer Services
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A&S Federal Credit Union
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A+ Federal Credit Union
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AAA (Credit Card)
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AAA Banking - Personal
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AAA Credit Union
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AAA Visa Signature Credit Card
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AAAA Benefits - Retirement Plans
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AAC Credit Union
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AAEC Credit Union
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AB&T National Bank
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AB&W Emp. Credit Union
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Abacus Federal Saving Bank
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ABANCA
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Abbeville First Bank - Business
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Abbeville First Bank - Personal
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Abbey Credit Union
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Abbott Laboratories Employee Credit Union
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Abby Bank - Business
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Abby Bank - Personal
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ABD Federal Credit Union
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ABE Federal Credit Union
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Abilene Teachers Federal Credit Union
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Abington Bank
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ableBanking
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ABN Amro
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ABNB Federal Credit Union
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Abound Credit Union
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Abri Credit Union
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Academic Federal Credit Union
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Academy Bank
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Academy Sports + Outdoors Credit Card
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Acadia FCU (Maine)
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ACBA Federal Credit Union
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Accentra Credit Union
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Access Bank - Business
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Browse All 9,697 Banks →

97 pages • 100 banks per page

Plaid FAQ

Plaid is a financial technology company that provides APIs enabling applications to connect with users' bank accounts. It acts as an intermediary between financial institutions and fintech apps, allowing secure access to bank data for services like payment initiation, account verification, and transaction history. Plaid supports over 12,000 financial institutions across the US, Canada, UK, and Europe.

Yes, Plaid is considered safe to use. The company employs bank-level security measures including 256-bit AES encryption, secure data storage, and regular security audits. Plaid is SOC 2 Type II certified and complies with financial regulations including PSD2 in Europe. Your bank credentials are encrypted and Plaid does not store your login information after the initial connection.

Plaid supports over 12,000 financial institutions including major banks like Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citibank, Capital One, and US Bank. It also supports credit unions, online banks like Chime and Ally, and international banks in Canada, UK, and Europe. You can search the full list of Plaid supported banks on this page.

Plaid works by creating a secure connection between your bank account and the app you're using. When you link your bank through Plaid, you enter your banking credentials in Plaid's secure interface (not the third-party app). Plaid then verifies your identity with your bank and retrieves the requested data—like account balances or transaction history—which is shared with the app in a standardized format.

Plaid supports most major US banks and thousands of smaller institutions. To check if your bank is supported, search the bank coverage list above or try connecting your account through the app you're using. If your bank isn't listed, Plaid may still support it through manual account verification using micro-deposits.

A Plaid verification code is a security measure used during the bank linking process. When Plaid cannot verify your account instantly, it may send micro-deposits (small amounts under $1) to your bank account. The verification code consists of the amounts of these deposits, which you enter to confirm account ownership. This process typically takes 1-2 business days.

For end users linking their bank accounts, Plaid is free—you won't be charged for connecting your bank to apps. However, businesses and developers pay Plaid for API access. Pricing varies based on usage and the specific products used (Identity, Transactions, Auth, etc.). Plaid offers a free tier for developers to test the API.

Yes, you can revoke Plaid's access to your bank account at any time. Visit my.plaid.com to see all apps connected to your accounts and disconnect any you no longer use. You can also remove access directly through your bank's online portal by revoking third-party data sharing permissions, or by contacting Plaid support.

No, Fidelity does not use Plaid. Fidelity Investments has confirmed they do not utilize Plaid for account linking or data sharing. Fidelity works with security experts and regulators to implement their own secure methods for customer-directed account data sharing. If you're trying to connect your Fidelity account to a fintech app, you may need to use alternative linking methods or manual verification processes that don't rely on Plaid.

While Plaid supports over 12,000 financial institutions, some notable exclusions include Fidelity Investments (which has confirmed they don't use Plaid), certain credit unions with limited third-party integrations, and some smaller regional banks. If your bank or brokerage isn't supported, apps may offer alternative connection methods like manual account entry, micro-deposit verification, or direct integrations with other aggregators like MX, Yodlee, or Finicity.

Yes. When you enter your bank credentials in Plaid Link, they are encrypted and used only to establish a one-time connection with your bank. Plaid does not store your password after authentication. The app you're using receives a secure token—not your login details—and can request only the data you've authorized. You can revoke access anytime at my.plaid.com.

Plaid does not sell your personal financial data to third parties for marketing or advertising. Their business model is B2B: they charge developers and companies for API access, not by selling user data. Plaid's privacy policy states they use data only to provide the services you've authorized (e.g. sharing balance or transaction data with the app you connected). You can review and manage your connections at my.plaid.com.

Yes, Venmo uses Plaid to link your bank account for instant verification and transfers. When you add a bank account on Venmo, you may see the Plaid connection flow. Plaid allows Venmo to verify account ownership and initiate transfers without Venmo ever seeing your bank login credentials.

Yes, Cash App uses Plaid to connect your bank account for adding cash and withdrawals. When you link a bank to Cash App, the connection is often powered by Plaid. You can manage Plaid-linked apps, including Cash App, at my.plaid.com.

PayPal uses Plaid in some flows for bank linking and instant verification, particularly in the US. Not every PayPal bank connection uses Plaid—PayPal also has direct bank partnerships and other methods. If you see the Plaid name or logo during PayPal bank linking, that connection is powered by Plaid.

Thousands of apps use Plaid, including Venmo, Cash App, PayPal, Robinhood, Coinbase, Chime, Acorns, Betterment, Dave, Current, Varo, QuickBooks, and many budgeting, investing, and payment apps. When you tap 'Connect Bank' or 'Link Account' in an app and see Plaid's interface, that app uses Plaid. You can see all apps connected through Plaid at my.plaid.com.

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