Millions of Capital One customers are about to get paid — and most of them do not need to lift a finger to collect. A federal judge gave final approval on April 20, 2026 to a $425 million class action settlement against Capital One, resolving years of litigation over the bank’s handling of two nearly identical savings accounts that paid dramatically different interest rates. For eligible customers, the money is coming automatically, and the checks — or direct deposits — are expected to land around July 21, 2026.
Here is everything you need to know.
The Case That Forced Capital One to Pay Up
The lawsuit centers on a straightforward but costly gap. When Capital One launched its 360 Performance Savings account in September 2019, it offered significantly higher interest rates than its existing 360 Savings product. The problem was that the bank never clearly told older account holders that they were sitting in a lower-earning account — or that switching was even an option.
As rates climbed nationally beginning in 2022, that gap became glaring. At its widest, the 360 Performance Savings account paid more than 14 times the rate offered on the original 360 Savings. Customers in the older account kept earning next to nothing while Capital One quietly funneled new savers into the higher-yield product.
U.S. District Judge David J. Novak, who had previously rejected an earlier settlement in November 2025 for not going far enough, signed off on the revised deal — one that more than doubles the direct cash payout and adds a forward-looking rate parity requirement.
Who Qualifies for a Payout
Eligibility is broad. Capital One customers who qualify include anyone who
- Held a Capital One 360 Savings account at any point between September 18, 2019 and June 16, 2025
- Are joint holders or co-holders of an eligible account — though only primary account holders receive direct payments
- Did not submit a written opt-out request before the March 30, 2026 deadline
No claim form is required. If you meet the criteria and did not opt out, you are automatically included and will receive payment without taking any additional steps.
How Much Will You Get
Your payout is calculated based on how much additional interest you would have earned if your 360 Savings balance had been paid at the 360 Performance Savings rate throughout the eligible period. The $425 million fund is reduced first by legal fees and administrative costs before the remainder is divided among eligible account holders.
One detail worth noting— customers who proactively switched to the 360 Performance Savings account — or closed their 360 Savings account — by October 2, 2025 are set to receive payments approximately 15% higher than those who left their accounts unchanged.
When and How Payments Arrive
Payments are expected on or around July 21, 2026 — provided no appeal delays the process. Judge Novak required any objector planning to appeal to post a $25,000 bond, raising the barrier to frivolous delays significantly.
- Customers who opted into electronic payment by March 30, 2026 will receive funds digitally
- All others owed more than $5 will receive a mailed check
- Payments under $5 will only go out to those who chose electronic payment before the deadline
A Permanent Rate Change for Current Customers
Beyond the cash settlement, Capital One is now required to match the interest rates on its 360 Savings and 360 Performance Savings accounts going forward — and must maintain that parity for at least two years. For current 360 Savings customers, that means an automatic rate jump from 1.00% APY to 3.20% APY, no action required. The estimated value of that future interest benefit adds roughly $530 million more in consumer gains, bringing the total value of the settlement to approximately $955 million.
For a bank that spent years keeping its most loyal savers in the dark, that is a significant correction — and one that arrives with a check attached.
Source: Yahoo Finance

