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REGULATORY MATTERS
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2025
Mortgage Banking [Abstract]  
REGULATORY MATTERS
NOTE 23 - REGULATORY MATTERS
As a BHC and FHC, the Company is subject to regulation and supervision by the FRB. Our banking subsidiary, CBNA, is a national banking association primarily regulated by the OCC.
Under the current U.S. Basel III capital framework, the Company and CBNA must meet the following specific minimum requirements: CET1 capital ratio of 4.5%, Tier 1 capital ratio of 6.0%, Total capital ratio of 8.0%, and Tier 1 leverage ratio of 4.0%. As a BHC, the Company’s SCB of 4.5% is imposed on top of the three minimum risk-based capital ratios listed above and a CCB of 2.5% is imposed on top of the three minimum risk-based capital ratios listed above for CBNA. The Company’s SCB is re-calibrated with each biennial supervisory stress test and updated annually to reflect the Company’s planned common stock dividends. In addition, the Company must not be subject to a written agreement, order, or capital directive with any of its regulators. Failure to meet minimum capital requirements can result in the initiation of certain actions that, if undertaken, could have a material effect on the Company’s Consolidated Financial Statements.
The following table presents the regulatory capital ratios for the Company and CBNA under the U.S. Basel III Standardized rules. The Company and CBNA have both declared as an “AOCI opt-out” institution, which means they are not required to recognize the AOCI impact of net unrealized gains and losses on debt securities and accumulated net gains and losses on cash flow hedges and certain defined benefit pension plan assets in regulatory capital. In addition, both entities elected to delay the estimated impact of CECL on regulatory capital for a two-year period ending December 31, 2021, followed by a three-year transition period ending December 31, 2024, to phase-in the aggregate amount of the capital benefit provided during the initial two-year delay.
ActualRequired Minimum Capital
(dollars in millions)AmountRatioAmount
Ratio(1)
As of December 31, 2025
CET1 capital
CFG$18,240 10.6 %$15,434 9.0 %
CBNA20,946 12.3 11,946 7.0 
Tier 1 capital
CFG20,351 11.9 18,007 10.5 
CBNA20,946 12.3 14,506 8.5 
Total capital
CFG23,654 13.8 21,437 12.5 
CBNA24,135 14.1 17,919 10.5 
Tier 1 leverage
CFG20,351 9.5 8,613 4.0 
CBNA20,946 9.8 8,572 4.0 
As of December 31, 2024
CET1 capital
CFG$17,900 10.8 %$14,913 9.0 %
CBNA20,250 12.3 11,549 7.0 
Tier 1 capital
CFG20,013 12.1 17,398 10.5 
CBNA20,250 12.3 14,024 8.5 
Total capital
CFG23,232 14.0 20,712 12.5 
CBNA23,362 14.2 17,324 10.5 
Tier 1 leverage
CFG20,013 9.4 8,502 4.0 
CBNA20,250 9.6 8,474 4.0 
(1) Represents minimum requirement under the current capital framework plus the SCB of 4.5% and CCB of 2.5% for CFG and CBNA, respectively. The SCB and CCB are not applicable to the Tier 1 leverage ratio.
The Company’s capital distributions are subject to the oversight of the FRB. Under the FRB’s SCB framework, failure to maintain risk-based capital ratios above the respective minimum requirements, including the SCB, would result in graduated restrictions on the Company’s ability to make certain discretionary bonus payments and capital distributions, including common stock dividends and share repurchases. The timing and amount of future dividends and share repurchases will depend on various factors, including the Company’s capital position, financial performance, balance sheet growth, market conditions, and regulatory considerations. All future capital distributions are subject to consideration and approval by the Company’s Board of Directors prior to execution. See Note 15 for more information regarding the Company’s common stock dividends and share repurchases.
Also, there are statutory and regulatory limitations on the ability of CBNA, as a national bank subsidiary, to pay dividends or make other capital distributions to the Parent Company. Dividends are limited to the lesser of the amount calculated under a “recent earnings” test and an “undivided profits” test. Under the recent earnings test, a dividend may not be paid if the total of all dividends declared during any calendar year exceeds the sum of current year net income and retained net income of the two preceding years, less any required transfers to surplus, unless the national bank obtains the approval of the OCC. Under the undivided profits test, a dividend may not be paid in excess of the entity’s “undivided profits” (generally accumulated net profits that have not been paid out as dividends or transferred to surplus). Federal banking regulatory agencies have issued policy statements that provide that FDIC-insured depository institutions and their holding companies should generally pay dividends out of current operating earnings only.