Skip to main content
State GuidesWashington

Most Trustworthy Credit Unions in Washington (2026)

We analyzed all 75 NCUA-insured credit unions in Washington by net worth ratio, ROA, and CFPB complaint data. Here are the most trustworthy.

Betty Jones
Senior Financial Writer · Bankzia Editorial
Published June 25, 2026·7 min read·1,320 words
Person using a contactless payment card at a terminal
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

Washington is home to 75 NCUA-insured credit unions with a combined $95.3 billion in assets. Credit unions are member-owned, non-profit financial cooperatives — and while they often offer lower fees and better rates than banks, not all are equally financially sound. 46 of Washington's credit unions earned a Bankzia Trust Grade of A, reflecting strong net worth ratios and low CFPB complaint rates.

We evaluated every NCUA-insured credit union headquartered in Washington using our Trust Grade — a composite A–F score combining NCUA quarterly call-report financial data with CFPB consumer complaint records. Here are the top-rated credit unions in Washington.

How we evaluate Washington credit unions

The Bankzia Trust Grade for credit unions uses the same two-pillar framework applied to banks: Financial Strength (60% weight: net worth ratio, return on assets, institutional age) and Customer Experience (40% weight: CFPB complaint rate per $1B in assets, response timeliness, consumer relief rate). Net worth ratio is the credit union equivalent of a bank's capital ratio — the NCUA classifies credit unions above 7% as "well-capitalized." Data sources: NCUA Call Report Data and the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database.

Top-rated credit unions in Washington by Trust Grade

#NameGradeScoreAssetsCFPB Complaints
1 Columbia Community
Vancouver
A 98/100 $2.6B None
2 Qualstar
Bothell
A 98/100 $923M None
3 Our Community
Shelton
A 98/100 $640M None
4 Cascade
Kent
A 98/100 $380M None
5 Wcla
Olympia
A 98/100 $145M None
6 Alaska Air Group
Seatac
A 98/100 $136M None
7 Mill Town
Everett
A 98/100 $60M None
8 Longshoremen's Local 4
Vancouver
A 98/100 $40M None
9 Puget Sound Refinery
Anacortes
A 98/100 $17M None
10 Utility Employees
Aberdeen
A 98/100 $3M None

Columbia Community: Washington's highest-rated credit union

Columbia Community earns the top Trust Grade among all Washington credit unions with a score of 98/100 and a grade of A. Headquartered in Vancouver, the institution holds $2.6 billion in total assets, with no CFPB complaints on record.

Top-graded credit unions typically maintain net worth ratios well above the NCUA's 7% "well-capitalized" floor, post positive and consistent returns on assets, and generate complaint rates far below peer medians. Because credit unions are non-profit and member-owned, their incentive structures often naturally align with lower-complaint outcomes — but financial discipline still varies significantly between institutions, which is exactly why the Trust Grade exists.

A
98/100
$2.6B
None

Trust Grade distribution across Washington credit unions

Among the 75 graded credit unions headquartered in Washington:

46
21
7
1

Credit unions as a group tend to earn higher average Trust Grades than banks, largely because their non-profit, member-owned model produces lower CFPB complaint rates. Still, 1 Washington credit unions earned a D or F grade — see our credit unions to avoid in Washington article for the lowest-rated institutions and what the warning signs mean.

Why credit unions often outperform banks on trust metrics

Because credit unions are non-profit cooperatives owned by their members, they face fundamentally different incentives than shareholder-owned banks. Earnings are returned to members through lower loan rates, higher share (savings) yields, and fewer fees — rather than paid out as dividends to outside investors. This structure consistently produces lower CFPB complaint rates in our data.

However, financial strength still varies considerably between institutions. Net worth ratios — the credit union equivalent of a bank's capital ratio — range from single digits to well above 15%. The NCUA classifies credit unions as "well-capitalized" when the net worth ratio exceeds 7% and "adequately capitalized" between 6–7%. We reward institutions above 7% in the Trust Grade and penalize those below 6%, where Prompt Corrective Action requirements begin.

Return on assets also varies. A credit union consistently posting losses is depleting its net worth — the only cushion members have beyond NCUA insurance. We weight sustained positive ROA heavily in the financial strength pillar.

How to join a credit union in Washington

Credit unions require membership, but eligibility has expanded significantly in recent years. Most Washington residents qualify for at least one credit union through one of these pathways:

  • Community charters: Many credit unions now serve all residents of Washington — or a specific county, metropolitan area, or region — regardless of employer. These are the most accessible.
  • Employer-based (SEG) credit unions: If your employer has a Select Employee Group agreement with a credit union, you and your immediate family are typically eligible.
  • Association or organization membership: Some credit unions extend eligibility to members of professional associations, alumni organizations, or community groups.
  • Family membership: Most credit unions allow immediate family members of existing members to join.

Many Washington credit unions allow you to qualify by making a one-time donation to an affiliated nonprofit — often $5–$25. Check each institution's membership page for current eligibility rules.

NCUA deposit insurance: what Washington members need to know

Every credit union on this list is insured by the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) through the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund (NCUSIF). Coverage is identical to FDIC coverage: up to $250,000 per member, per ownership category, per credit union — backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. government. The NCUA has never failed to pay out insured shares in the agency's history since 1970.

The same ownership-category rules that apply to FDIC insurance apply to NCUA coverage: individual accounts, joint accounts, IRAs, and trust accounts each qualify for separate coverage. A family with both individual and joint accounts can potentially hold more than $250,000 at the same credit union with full insurance.

Verify NCUA coverage: Use the NCUA Credit Union Locator to confirm any credit union's insurance status and charter number. Bankzia displays NCUA charter numbers on every credit union profile page.

What to look for beyond the Trust Grade when choosing a Washington credit union

Once you've identified top-graded credit unions in Washington, here are additional factors worth evaluating before committing to membership:

  • Membership accessibility. Even within the same state, credit union membership fields vary widely. A credit union with a community charter serving all Washington residents is much easier to join than one requiring a specific employer or trade association. Confirm your eligibility before spending time comparing products.
  • Fee structures. Credit unions typically offer fewer and lower fees than banks — but "typically" is not "always." Compare monthly maintenance fees, overdraft fees, ATM out-of-network fees, and wire transfer fees. Some larger Washington credit unions have fee structures that approach bank levels.
  • Dividend rates and loan rates. The core financial advantage of credit unions shows up in higher savings dividend rates and lower loan rates. Compare the credit union's savings APY and personal loan or auto loan rates against local bank alternatives. A meaningful gap confirms the member-ownership benefit is being passed on.
  • ATM network and shared branching. Most credit unions participate in the CO-OP network (30,000+ fee-free ATMs nationwide) and many participate in shared branching — allowing you to make deposits and withdrawals at other participating credit unions. Confirm before assuming ATM access will be comparable to a large bank.
  • Digital banking maturity. Smaller credit unions sometimes lag on mobile banking features. Check for mobile deposit, Zelle integration, real-time transaction alerts, and biometric login before opening an account if digital banking is central to how you manage money.
  • Loan product availability. If you anticipate needing a mortgage, home equity line, or small business loan, verify the credit union offers that product in Washington and check its rates. Not all credit unions offer the full range of lending products.

Additional resources for Washington credit union members

Data sources: FDIC BankFind Suite (quarterly call reports), NCUA Financial Performance Reports, CFPB Consumer Complaint Database. Financial figures reflect the most recently published quarterly call report data. Complaint data is updated as new CFPB records are published. The Bankzia Trust Grade is a proprietary composite score — not a government rating. Deposits at all listed institutions are federally insured up to $250,000 per depositor, per ownership category.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which credit union in Washington has the highest Trust Grade?

Columbia Community, headquartered in Vancouver, currently holds the top Trust Grade among Washington credit unions with a score of 98/100 and a grade of A.

Are credit unions in Washington federally insured?

Yes. Every credit union on this list is NCUA-insured, protecting member deposits (called "shares") up to $250,000 per member, per ownership category — identical coverage to FDIC insurance at banks.

How many credit unions are in Washington?

Bankzia tracks 75 NCUA-insured credit unions headquartered in Washington, holding a combined $95.3 billion in assets.

Is a credit union safer than a bank?

Both carry federal deposit insurance up to $250,000 — FDIC for banks, NCUA for credit unions. Neither is inherently "safer." Use the Trust Grade to compare individual institutions. Credit unions as a group tend to earn slightly higher average Trust Grades due to lower complaint rates, but individual results vary significantly.

Can anyone join a credit union in Washington?

Eligibility varies by institution. Many Washington credit unions have broad community charters serving all state residents. Others are employer-based or association-based. Check each credit union's membership page — in many cases, a small donation to an affiliated nonprofit ($5–$25) qualifies you for membership.

What is a net worth ratio and why does it matter?

The net worth ratio is the credit union equivalent of a bank's capital ratio — it measures how much of the institution's assets are funded by member equity rather than borrowed funds. The NCUA requires a net worth ratio above 7% for "well-capitalized" status. Ratios below 6% trigger mandatory Prompt Corrective Action.

How do credit union Trust Grades compare to bank Trust Grades?

Credit unions as a group tend to earn slightly higher average Trust Grades than banks, primarily because non-profit, member-owned structures generate lower CFPB complaint rates. However, individual credit unions range from A to F grades — the Trust Grade is always about the specific institution, not the institution type.

What happens to my money if a Washington credit union fails?

The NCUA steps in as receiver and typically arranges a merger with a healthier credit union. If no merger partner is found, the NCUSIF pays out insured shares directly — typically within a few business days. Uninsured shares (above $250,000) become claims against the receivership estate.

Top-ranked institutions in this article

Columbia Community
Vancouver
A
Qualstar
Bothell
A
Our Community
Shelton
A
Cascade
Kent
A
Wcla
Olympia
A
Alaska Air Group
Seatac
A
Topics:washingtoncredit unionstrust gradencuarankings
Written by
Betty Jones
Senior Financial Writer · B.A. Journalism, University of Texas at Austin

Betty Jones has spent 12 years covering banking regulation, consumer finance, and the economics of trust in financial institutions. She started her career at a regional newspaper covering the Federal Reserve and FDIC regulatory beat before moving into financial media. Betty holds a journalism degree from the University of Texas at Austin and has been a contributing analyst at several fintech publications. She built Bankzia's editorial framework and is the primary author of the Trust Grade methodology explainer series.

Related articles

Financial data on a computer screen showing bank performance metrics
State GuidesWisconsin
Most Trustworthy Banks in Wisconsin (2026)
We analyzed all 154 FDIC-insured banks headquartered in Wisconsin using financial strength and CFPB complaint data. Here are the most trustworthy banks in the state.
June 25, 2026·8 min read
Person using a contactless payment card at a terminal
State GuidesWisconsin
Most Trustworthy Credit Unions in Wisconsin (2026)
We analyzed all 99 NCUA-insured credit unions in Wisconsin by net worth ratio, ROA, and CFPB complaint data. Here are the most trustworthy.
June 25, 2026·7 min read
Stacked financial documents representing bank complaint records
Warning
State GuidesWisconsin
Banks to Avoid in Wisconsin: Lowest Trust Grade Ratings (2026)
2 banks in Wisconsin earned a D or F Trust Grade. Here are the lowest-rated FDIC-insured banks in the state — and what the warning signs mean for depositors.
June 25, 2026·7 min read