44 routing numbers 37 banks & credit unions

Bank routing numbers in District of Columbia

Every bank and credit union with a Federal Reserve FedACH-registered address in District of Columbia. Click any routing number to see the institution's full record, including the city, address, and contact phone on file with the Fed. Use the bank-name link to view all of that institution's routing numbers across every state.

Routing #Bank / Credit UnionCityPhone
2540-7547-0 Advantage Financial Federal CU Washington (202) 737-6969
2540-7405-7 Agriculture Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 479-2270
2550-7690-2 Agriculture Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 479-2270
2540-7417-0 Bank-fund Staff FCU Washington (202) 212-6557
2540-7427-7 Census Federal Credit Union Washington (301) 763-0287
0540-0168-6 City First Bank Of D.c.,N.A. Washington (202) 243-7100
2540-7446-8 D.c. Teachers FCU Washington (202) 547-4800
2540-7445-5 Dc Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 673-3632
2540-7437-4 Dc Fire Dept Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 635-0118
2540-7443-9 Department Of Commerce FCU Washington (202) 808-3598
2540-7555-1 Department Of Commerce FCU Washington (202) 808-3598
2540-7444-2 Department Of Interior FCU Washington (202) 208-3936
2540-7442-6 Department Of Labor FCU Washington (202) 789-2901
2540-7501-4 Departmentof Labor FCU Washington (202) 789-2901
2540-7422-2 Ep Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 874-3825
2810-8153-4 F R B FCU Washington (202) 452-3871
0210-3950-0 Fannie Mae Washington (202) 752-6018
0265-9079-8 Fannie Mae Washington (202) 752-6018
0265-9080-8 Fannie Mae Washington (202) 752-6018
2540-7458-1 Frb Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 452-3871
2550-7692-8 Geico Federal Credit Union Washington (301) 986-3789
2540-7467-5 Georgetown Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 687-4702
0540-8021-2 Georgetown Univ Alumni & Student FCU Washington (202) 687-8212
2540-7464-6 Gpo FCU Washington (202) 512-1067
2540-7462-0 Gsa Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 501-0677
2540-7466-2 Gsa Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 488-5315
2540-7472-7 Howard University Employees FCU Washington (202) 806-6130
2540-7473-0 Hud Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 863-2800
2540-7418-3 Idb-iic Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 623-3363
0540-0095-9 Industrial Bank, N.A.. Washington (202) 722-2000
2540-7987-4 Napfe Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 939-6325
2550-8001-1 National Geographic FCU Washington (202) 862-8626
0540-0151-8 Nbad Americas N.v. Washington (202) 842-7959
2540-7506-9 Oasstaff Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 458-3834
2540-7507-2 Paho/who Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 974-3453
2540-7511-1 Pepco Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 872-3085
0540-8016-0 Phi Beta Sigma Federal Credit Union Washington (202) 726-5424
0540-0005-6 The National Capital Bank Of Wash Washington (202) 546-8000
2540-7538-6 Transit Employees FCU Washington (202) 832-5100
2540-7539-9 Transportation FCU Washington (202) 366-9400
2540-7423-5 Treasury Department FCU Washington (202) 289-1950
2540-7540-9 Treasury Department FCU Washington (202) 289-1950
3222-8296-2 Treasury Department FCU Washington (202) 289-1950
2540-7548-3 Washington Typographic FCU Washington (202) 966-5155

About banking in District of Columbia

District of Columbia is home to 37 chartered banks and credit unions registered with the Federal Reserve's FedACH Participant directory. The list above includes national banks operating local branches, state-chartered community banks, federally insured credit unions, savings institutions, and the local Federal Reserve servicing branches that clear payments for the region. Each institution maintains at least one routing transit number (RTN) — and many of the larger national brands carry several distinct numbers within a single state to reflect the legacy charters they absorbed through past mergers.

The routing number listed for a given District of Columbia bank is the number you would use for ACH credits and debits — including direct deposit of payroll, automatic bill-pay, IRS tax refunds, Social Security payments, and electronic payments to vendors. For domestic wire transfers, larger banks may publish a separate national wire-routing number; always confirm the correct wire RTN with the bank before sending an irreversible Fedwire payment.

Common District of Columbia banking tasks

  • Setting up direct deposit — give your employer the routing number listed for the bank where your account was opened, plus your account number. The routing number does not change if you move to another state, even if the bank also operates there.
  • Receiving a federal tax refund — the IRS uses the same ACH routing number as direct deposit. Double-check the number on your tax return before filing; refunds sent to a wrong routing number can take 6–12 weeks to recover.
  • Linking external accounts — services like Venmo, PayPal, Cash App, Zelle, and brokerage transfers all rely on the ABA routing number to verify ownership of your account through micro-deposits.
  • Closing on real estate — wire instructions provided by a title company should always be confirmed by phone using a number you found independently. Wire fraud targeting District of Columbia homebuyers is one of the most common high-value scams reported to the FBI.

Top cities for banking in District of Columbia

Within District of Columbia, FedACH-registered offices are concentrated in the metro centers where the state's largest banks and credit unions maintain their headquarters or operations centers. The city pages linked below list every routing number registered to an institution at that city's address — useful when you're confirming a local community bank or credit union by location rather than by brand.

  • Washington — 44 routing numbers across 37 institutions

Federal Reserve coverage

Payments originating from District of Columbia are settled through one of the twelve Federal Reserve districts. The first two digits of the routing number for any local bank tell you which district handles the clearing — for example, numbers beginning with 12 settle through the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, while numbers beginning with 02 settle through New York. This is invisible to you as a customer, but it is the reason an ACH transfer initiated late in the day in one part of the country can post a full business day after one initiated earlier elsewhere.