Credit Union Bonuses & Member Offers
Federally-insured credit unions offering competitive bonuses and rates — with field-of-membership eligibility, NCUA coverage, and member-owned structure noted.
Credit unions are not-for-profit, member-owned financial cooperatives. Membership is required to open accounts; once you join, you can open the same kinds of products you'd open at a bank — checking, savings, money market, CDs, IRAs — and the rate profile is often competitive with or better than commercial banks. Bonus structures resemble those at banks (direct-deposit gates, deposit-threshold gates, holding periods) but the eligibility step (joining the credit union) is unique to this category.
Field of membership defines who can join. Common eligibility paths include employment at a sponsoring employer, residence in a stated geography, membership in an affiliated organization, or family relationship with an existing member. Many credit unions extend membership through a small donation to a partner organization (often $5–$25) — an accessible path that opens a national footprint of credit unions to most readers willing to look.
Federally-insured credit unions are covered by the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF), administered by the NCUA. Standard coverage is $250,000 per depositor, per insured credit union, per ownership category — equivalent in amount and structure to FDIC coverage at banks. State-chartered credit unions may carry NCUA coverage or a private alternative; verify before depositing. See our NCUA insurance guide.
Live offers
No offers currently tracked
We do not have any verified live offers in this category at the moment. New offers are added once we have confirmed the terms against the issuing institution's source page. Check back periodically, or read the guides below to understand what to look for in this category when offers do become available.
Standing reminder: any offer you encounter elsewhere should be evaluated against the bank's published terms, not third-party marketing copy. Use the account opening checklist before applying.
How we evaluate credit union offers
Credit union offers are scored on the same net-value framework as bank offers, with an added line for membership-entry friction: any donation cost, any required share-account opening, and the one-time documentation step of proving eligibility. These costs are usually small and one-time; they amortize quickly across multiple offers at the same credit union over time.
We also look at the cooperative's broader posture: shared-branching network membership (which extends in-person service across many credit unions), ATM network coverage, online and mobile tooling quality, and any history of restrictive practices on transfers in or out. Smaller credit unions sometimes have less developed digital banking infrastructure than a national online bank; weigh that against the rate and bonus benefit.
Bonuses are taxable income in the same way as bank bonuses. Credit unions typically report on Form 1099-INT for interest and may use 1099-MISC for cash bonuses depending on accounting. Coverage is in our tax implications guide.
What makes a credit union offer worth pursuing
A credit union offer is worth the membership step when the long-term rate profile (on savings, CDs, or loans you may pursue later) holds up against alternatives, not just the headline bonus. Credit unions sometimes offer materially better loan rates (auto loans, mortgages) than commercial banks; this is a benefit you only access by being a member. If the credit union's product set looks competitive across its full range, a bonus is a useful nudge to join.
Membership at a major credit union opens an ecosystem rather than a single account. Shared-branching cooperatives and shared ATM networks (e.g., CO-OP) mean a single credit union membership can give in-person service in many cities. Evaluate the network if in-person matters to you.
Donation-based eligibility paths are legitimate but underused. A small donation (often $5–$25) to a partner association can be the entry to a credit union with a national footprint. Verify the current donation path on the credit union's site — sponsorships change over time.