COMPANIES

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Office address: 400 7th St. SW, Washington, DC 20219
Website: occ.gov
Year established: 1863
Company type: government agency
Employees: 3,130+ (2025)
Expertise: bank supervision, bank regulation, bank chartering, licensing, consumer protection, risk management, federal savings association oversight, foreign bank supervision, financial compliance, bank examination
Parent company: US Department of the Treasury
Key people: Jonathan Gould (comptroller), Kate Tyrrell (CoS), Adam Cohen (chief counsel), Jay Gallagher (chief national bank examiner), Larry Hattix (chief risk officer), Greg Coleman and Stephen Lybarger (senior deputy comptrollers)
Financing status: government-funded agency

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is a Washington-based, independent federal banking regulator within the US Department of the Treasury. It charters, regulates, and supervises over 1,000 national banks and federal savings associations across the US. The agency has more than 3,130 employees and a $1.38 billion budget as of 2025.

History of Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

The US faced a serious challenge in the early 1860s with unreliable paper money and limited credit. President Abraham Lincoln and Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase came up with a solution to this problem.

They created the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency through the National Currency Act of 1863. The OCC's job was to charter national banks and establish a stable, uniform currency system.

A new era for banking

The next 50 years brought major changes to American finance. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 created a central banking system with branches across major US cities.

World War II then pulled many OCC bank examiners away from their desks and into military combat. The agency maintained its oversight as banks shifted their lending focus to support the government during wartime.

The 2008 financial crisis

The year 2008 tested the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency like never before. Housing prices dropped for the first time on record as foreclosures reached historic levels across the country.

The OCC stepped in to help stabilize banks through the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). The agency also developed stress tests to check how well large banks could survive major economic shocks.

Fintech and modern challenges

The agency launched the Office of Innovation and began accepting fintech charter applications in 2018. By 2024, the OCC turned its attention to AI regulation and consumer protection compliance. The agency also tightened its enforcement of the Telephone Consumer Protection Act to shield bank customers from unwanted calls.

More changes followed in 2025. The Trump administration's downsizing efforts resulted in over 2,300 job cuts across agencies, the OCC included. To address staff shortages, the OCC merged its supervision teams to keep bank oversight with a smaller workforce.

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency's products and services

The OCC offers regulatory services that help maintain a safe and sound federal banking system:

Supervision and examination

  • bank examination: on-site reviews of national banks and thrifts
  • risk-based supervision: focuses on material financial risks to institutions
  • sustained oversight: ongoing monitoring of bank operations and activities

Regulation

  • regulatory guidance: tailored rules based on bank size and complexity
  • technology-neutral framework: supports innovation while managing risk
  • compliance standards: helps banks follow applicable laws and regulations

Chartering and licensing

  • national bank charters: grants federal charters to qualifying institutions
  • fintech charters: accepts applications from financial technology companies
  • licensing review: case-by-case assessment of charter applications

Consumer protection

  • HelpWithMyBank: website for customer questions and complaints
  • fair access oversight: promotes equal treatment for all bank customers
  • anti-discrimination enforcement: protects customers from unfair debanking practices

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency also provides technical assistance to banks through the Office of Innovation. The agency helps institutions adopt new technologies while managing risk responsibly.

Culture and corporate values

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency regularly ranks as a top federal workplace, according to the Best Places to Work in the Federal Government. The OCC states that it operates according to four guiding principles:

  • integrity
  • expertise
  • collaboration
  • independence

The agency offers several employee benefits to help its staff:

  • compensation: competitive pay programs rewarding staff for strong performance
  • insurance and retirement: OCC-exclusive plans that supplement standard federal government offerings
  • work/life balance: services designed to help employees manage personal needs
  • career development: training and opportunities that support long-term career growth
  • workplace culture: highly rated for teamwork, diversity, pay, and benefits

Alongside these perks, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency offers careers that shape the US banking system. The agency seeks self-motivated professionals for supervision and various core business roles.

About Comptroller Jonathan Gould and key people

Jonathan Gould took office as the 32nd Comptroller of the Currency in 2025. He held prior roles as a partner at Jones Day and as senior deputy comptroller and chief counsel at the OCC. He graduated from Princeton University and got his law degree from Washington and Lee University.

Gould leads the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency alongside several senior leaders on the executive committee:

  • Kate Tyrrell serves as chief of staff and senior deputy comptroller, coordinating agency priorities and executive initiatives
  • Adam Cohen is senior deputy comptroller and chief counsel, advising on regulatory matters and enforcement actions
  • Greg Coleman is senior deputy comptroller for large and global financial institutions, focusing on complex banking organizations and systemic risk
  • Jay Gallagher serves as senior deputy comptroller and chief national bank examiner, setting standards for field examiners across the country
  • Larry Hattix is senior deputy comptroller for enterprise governance and ombudsman, and chief risk officer, identifying threats and resolving internal disputes
  • Stephen Lybarger is senior deputy comptroller for chartering, organization and structure, guiding new banks through the federal licensing process

The OCC's leadership team brings expertise in law, risk management, finance, and bank examination. These leaders work together to keep the federal banking system safe and sound.

The future at Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

In 2024, the OCC ended a consent order it had placed on Wells Fargo back in 2016. The order was tied to a fake accounts scandal where the bank created accounts for customers without permission. The termination shows the OCC's willingness to lift restrictions when banks meet compliance standards.

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency is also shaping AI adoption in banking. The agency teamed up with the Federal Reserve and FDIC to set AI guidelines for banks. This move shows that the OCC is adapting its oversight to address new risks in the industry.

The latest Office of the Comptroller of the Currency news

Displaying 28 results
Fed, FDIC and OCC clarify capital rules for tokenized securities
ALTERNATIVES MAR 05, 2026
Fed, FDIC and OCC clarify capital rules for tokenized securities

Regulators say blockchain-based securities get same capital treatment as traditional assets.

Wells Fargo shakes off last Fed consent order after decade-long regulatory cleanup
WIREHOUSES MAR 05, 2026
Wells Fargo shakes off last Fed consent order after decade-long regulatory cleanup

The end of Fed enforcement officially frees the bank from restrictive public consent orders for the first time since the notorious 2016 fake-accounts scandal.

Crypto custodian Anchorage Digital acquires Securitize’s RIA unit
RIA NEWS DEC 18, 2025
Crypto custodian Anchorage Digital acquires Securitize’s RIA unit

Anchorage’s move comes as custodians, including RIA giant Schwab, ramp up crypto offerings.

Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role
Cetera Trust hires Fidelity vet Kerri Scharr for chief fiduciary officer role

The newly appointed leader will be responsible for overseeing fiduciary governance, regulatory compliance, and risk management at Cetera's trust services company.

Trump administration's downsizing push hits thousands of Wall Street cops
Trump administration's downsizing push hits thousands of Wall Street cops

Buyouts, layoffs, early retirements, and hiring freezes have added up to the steepest cuts in decades at the SEC and other federal agencies.

Osaic taps veteran Saumya Bhavsar to head legal strategy
Osaic taps veteran Saumya Bhavsar to head legal strategy

The firm's new chief legal officer brings nearly three decades of experience, including tenures at Credit Suisse and UBS.

Wells Fargo keeping focus on independent advisors in 2025
Wells Fargo keeping focus on independent advisors in 2025

Is the bank's next step building out its RIA custody business, one industry observer asks.

Goldman, Citi shares surge on higher hopes of deregulation
EQUITIES NOV 06, 2024
Goldman, Citi shares surge on higher hopes of deregulation

Trump's victory at the polls extends a string of good news for US banks, including a sunny lower-rate outlook and a potential dealmaking revival.

Citi looks to boost wealth arm with better lures for advisors
WIREHOUSES OCT 24, 2024
Citi looks to boost wealth arm with better lures for advisors

The Wall Street giant is reportedly sweetening its recruitment packages for top-gun professionals as it continues to navigate a yearslong compliance cleanup.

'By making its services convenient for criminals, TD Bank became one' says Garland
RIA NEWS OCT 11, 2024
'By making its services convenient for criminals, TD Bank became one' says Garland

Regulators hold nothing back in condemnation of TD Bank after $3B fines.

TD faces $3 billion fine, growth restriction to settle US probes
RIA NEWS OCT 10, 2024
TD faces $3 billion fine, growth restriction to settle US probes

WSJ reports the Canadian bank will plead guilty on Thursday.

Senator Warren calls for curbs on "too big to manage" Citigroup
WIREHOUSES OCT 03, 2024
Senator Warren calls for curbs on "too big to manage" Citigroup

The US Senator pressed regulators to place growth restrictions on the Wall Street giant, citing repeated failures in its compliance and risk management.

Father-son advisor duo hops to LPL from Avantax
RIA NEWS JUL 31, 2024
Father-son advisor duo hops to LPL from Avantax

The Virginia-based family practice joins the firm after it reportedly managed some $170M at the tax-focused Cetera subsidiary.

Citigroup fined $135M for failure to comply with Fed, OCC enforcements
Citigroup fined $135M for failure to comply with Fed, OCC enforcements

Shares drop 1.3% in early trading following Wednesday's penalties.

Wall Street banks pick up buyback pace ahead of key Fed tests
Wall Street banks pick up buyback pace ahead of key Fed tests

The six largest lenders bought back more than $14B in shares in the first quarter as regulators hint at "lite" version of new rules.