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Minnesota State Wire

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Over 130 bank failures in the U.S. since 2012. How many were in Minnesota?

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Michael J. Hsu, FDIC Board of Directors - Acting Comptroller of the Currency | upload.wikimedia.org

Michael J. Hsu, FDIC Board of Directors - Acting Comptroller of the Currency | upload.wikimedia.org

Minnesota registered a total of six bank failures since 2012, according to a Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. report. Data shows that four of the cases happened in 2012.

These bank failures have resulted in a significant financial loss of $239.5 million, while holding $1.3 billion in customers' deposits and the bank's total assets of $1.3 billion.

The most significant and financially damaging bank failure occurred in Maple Grove with Inter Savings Bank, FSB. It occurred in April 2012, resulting in a substantial loss of $79.7 million. At the time of the failure, the bank held a significant amount of $458.1 million in customer deposits.

There have been 131 bank failures across the country since 2012, accounting for an estimated loss of $44.3 billion. That averages about 2.6 bank failures per state, which lags behind Minnesota's total of six during the period.

Silicon Valley Bank was shut down in March 2023 after significant losses and widespread withdrawals. The collapse, estimated at about $20 billion, was the largest U.S. bank failure since Washington Mutual in 2008. After an agreement with the FDIC, First Citizens Bank took over Silicon Valley Bank’s assets and operations.