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Brokerage Cash Sweep FDIC and SIPC Checklist for 2026

A practical 2026 guide to checking brokerage cash sweep programs, FDIC bank sweep limits, SIPC boundaries, money-market funds, statements, and beneficiary records.

TMtechmoneylab editorsData-verified
Published6/24/2026Sources8 citedVisuals5
Brokerage Cash Sweep FDIC and SIPC Checklist for 2026

Brokerage cash can look simple because the balance is visible on one dashboard, but the protection behind that balance depends on what the cash actually is. A bank sweep, a money-market mutual fund, unsettled trade cash, and securities held at a broker do not all use the same protection framework. This checklist was checked on 2026-06-24 against FDIC, SIPC, SEC, FINRA, and Investor.gov resources. It is educational only, not individualized legal, tax, insurance, or investment advice.

Brokerage Cash Sweep FDIC and SIPC Checklist for 2026

Practical decision table

SituationSafer actionAvoid
Dashboard says cashOpen the sweep disclosure and statement detailsAssuming every dollar is FDIC insured
Cash is swept to partner banksList each program bank and ownership categoryCounting the brokerage name as one bank limit
Cash is in a money-market fundRead fund risk, liquidity, and share-price languageCalling it a bank deposit
Brokerage fails or transfers accountsUnderstand SIPC scope and exclusionsExpecting SIPC to cover market losses
Estate or survivor planningCheck TOD/POD and account title recordsRelying on a will that conflicts with account paperwork

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Identify the exact container before comparing yield

Start with the monthly statement and cash management disclosure, not only the app balance. Many brokerage platforms place idle cash into a bank sweep program, while others default to a money-market fund or leave cash awaiting investment. The words “cash available” do not prove FDIC coverage. Write down the product name, program banks, fund ticker if any, ownership category, and whether the balance is settled or pending.

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Separate FDIC deposit insurance from SIPC protection

FDIC insurance generally applies to deposits at insured banks within ownership-category limits. SIPC protection is different: it addresses missing cash and securities when a brokerage firm fails, subject to its own limits and rules, and it does not protect against market losses. A sweep program can involve both a broker relationship and destination banks, so the practical question is which entity is holding what at the time of the problem.

Mini checklist

  • Save the official-source link or provider record before changing settings.
  • Keep screenshots or statements only if they do not expose full account numbers, passwords, children’s data, or medical details.
  • Add a calendar review date so this does not become a one-time cleanup.
  • Record who can act if the primary traveler, account owner, or device owner is unavailable.

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Check aggregation across banks and ownership categories

If the sweep sends money to several program banks, confirm whether you already hold deposits at those banks through another account. Coverage can aggregate by bank and ownership category, not by app screen. Couples, trusts, business entities, retirement accounts, and revocable trust beneficiaries can change the calculation. When balances approach limits, use official FDIC tools or qualified help rather than a spreadsheet guess.

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Review money-market funds as investments, not storage labels

A government or treasury money-market fund may be conservative, but it remains an investment product with a prospectus, fees, liquidity rules, and risks. Do not treat fund shares as bank deposits. If the cash is an emergency fund, match the product to the time horizon, liquidity need, and risk tolerance. If the cash is for a near-term tax bill, home closing, or payroll, document who can move it and how fast settlement occurs.

Make the checklist part of household records

Store the sweep disclosure, latest statement, beneficiary or transfer-on-death designation, login recovery plan, and a plain-language note for a trusted person. Survivors or helpers need to know whether they are dealing with a bank, a broker, a money-market fund, or an estate issue. AdSense readiness is preserved by keeping the guidance source-backed, non-promissory, and clear about when professional help is needed.

Source notes and readiness

This article keeps warnings and decision rules as accessible text rather than embedding them inside images. The generated visuals are supporting editorial images only; the enforceable guidance remains in the body, tables, and source list.

FAQ

Is this guide current for 2026?

Yes. It was checked against the listed sources on 2026-06-24, but official rules and provider policies can change.

What should I do first?

Start with the decision table, then verify the official source or provider record that applies to your situation.

When should I get expert help?

Get qualified help when mistakes could affect money, identity, health, travel access, legal duties, or account security.