Capital One’s recent $425M settlement could mean money in your pocket this summer

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Why it matters

A federal judge in the Eastern District of Virginia approved a $425 million class action settlement against Capital One on April 20, 2026, resolving claims that the bank deceptively marketed its legacy 360 Savings accounts while paying substantially lower interest rates than its newer 360 Performance Savings product launched in 2019. Eligible account holders—those who maintained a 360 Savings account from September 18, 2019, through June 16, 2025—will receive automatic restitution calculated based on lost interest earnings. Payments, distributed via check or electronic transfer, are expected around July 21, 2026, after deduction of legal fees.

Judge David Novak rejected an initial settlement proposal in November 2025 before approving the revised terms last month. The lawsuit centered on Capital One's failure to notify legacy account holders about the superior Performance Savings option, particularly as rate differentials widened following Federal Reserve increases—reaching 4.35% versus 0.30% by December 2023. Capital One has denied wrongdoing but agreed to align interest rates between both account types going forward. The renegotiated settlement increased net restitution to approximately $425 million after federal prosecutors objected to earlier proposals offering less than $300 million in actual payments.

Attorneys should note that payouts commence within weeks to potentially millions of affected customers. The settlement is distinct from Capital One's separate 2019 data breach settlement, which provides unrelated identity protection services through 2028. Capital One's stock has declined nearly 22% year-to-date, and the company faces ongoing scrutiny over account management practices.

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