Key Takeaways
- X Money’s new Cash Sweep Program offers Premium+ users up to $10M in FDIC coverage, 40x the $250K standard limit.
- The service pays a 6% APY and runs on a Visa partnership, holding standard deposits at Cross River Bank up to $250,000.
- A full public rollout is targeted for mid-2026, even as Senator Elizabeth Warren presses for tighter oversight.
A Tenfold-Plus Jump Over Standard Deposit Insurance
The rollout extends X Money to higher-tier users and introduces what the company calls the X Cash Sweep Program, which can provide up to $10 million in Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) coverage. That is roughly 40 times the standard $250,000 limit that applies to a single insured account.
A cash sweep works by distributing a customer’s deposits across a network of partner banks, with each slice covered up to the $250,000 ceiling, so the combined balance can be insured far above the usual cap. Standard X Money balances are held by Cross River Bank, with deposits insured up to $250,000 per person.
Musk has cast the product as a direct challenge to traditional banking, telling users earlier this year that with X Money “you won’t need a bank account.” The service is the financial centerpiece of his long-stated ambition to fold payments, messaging, and commerce into a single app.
What X Money Offers
Beyond the expanded insurance, X Money advertises a 6% annual percentage yield on deposits, a metal Visa debit card personalized with each user’s handle, 3% cashback on purchases, zero foreign-transaction fees, and peer-to-peer transfers. The payment rails are built on a partnership with Visa that the company first unveiled when it announced the X Money account.
The service has secured money-transmitter licenses in 41 states plus Washington, D.C., though it is not yet available in New York or Massachusetts, two of the largest financial markets in the country. X Money first appeared in a limited beta last year before this wider push to paying subscribers.
The $10 million figure is likely to draw attention precisely because it dwarfs what most consumers associate with deposit insurance. For users holding large balances, the sweep structure is a familiar tool in traditional wealth management, but its arrival inside a social-media app shows how far Musk intends to take X’s financial ambitions.
Regulators Are Watching
The expansion arrives as scrutiny of the product intensifies, with Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) recently sending a letter to Musk raising concerns about X Money’s launch, questioning consumer protections and the platform’s readiness to safeguard user funds. That oversight pressure has only grown as the service adds features and reaches more users.
Critics have noted the tension between Musk’s deregulatory politics and his entry into a heavily regulated corner of finance. Supporters counter that the FDIC backing, the Visa rails, and the bank partnerships place X Money within the existing regulatory perimeter rather than outside it.
For Musk, the calculus is adoption, given X has hundreds of millions of users, and converting even a fraction of them into depositors would instantly make X Money a meaningful player in consumer finance. In all of this, the Premium+ rollout is a controlled step, one that targets the platform’s most engaged and highest-spending subscribers first.
A full public rollout to all X users has been targeted for mid-2026 but has not been confirmed as complete.

