Skip to main content
bank

Collinsville Building And Loan Association

Collinsville, IL · Est. 1885 · Website ↗
A
Trust Grade
Excellent
Score: 91/100

Collinsville Building And Loan Association is a bank based in Collinsville, Illinois, established in 1885, with $116 million in total assets across 1 branch. By Trust Grade it ranks 257th of 328 banks we track in Illinois. Its capital ratio of 29.7% is stronger than 99% of similarly sized banks, versus a Illinois median of 10.3%. It was profitable over the most recent period, with a 0.06% return on assets. No consumer complaints against Collinsville Building And Loan Association appear in the CFPB database over our analysis window — common for an institution of this size and a point in its favor.

Total assets
$116.1M
$100M–1B institution
Deposits
$81.3M
Branches
1
Capital ratio
29.7%
Top 1% of $100M–1B peers · Illinois median 10.3%
Return on assets
0.1%
Bottom 4% of $100M–1B peers · Illinois median 1.1%
Rank in Illinois
#257
of 328 banks

How Collinsville Building And Loan Association compares to Illinois peers

Capital ratio
Top 1% of $100M–1B peers
Collinsville Building
29.7%
Illinois median
10.3%
Higher capital ratio = stronger financial cushion
Return on assets
Bottom 4% of $100M–1B peers
Collinsville Building
0.1%
Illinois median
1.1%
Higher ROA = more profitable relative to asset base

How we graded Collinsville Building And Loan Association

The Trust Grade blends financial strength with complaint history. Full methodology →

Financial strength
91/100
Customer experience
n/a
Overall
A · 91
  • Strongly capitalized (29.7% capital ratio)
  • Profitable (ROA 0.06%)
  • No CFPB complaints on record

Consumer complaints (CFPB)

No CFPB complaints are on file for Collinsville Building And Loan Association over the analysis window. For a smaller institution this is common and counts in its favor.

Branch locations (1)

  • 701 Belt Line Rd, Collinsville, IL 62234

Are deposits at Collinsville Building And Loan Association insured?

Yes. Collinsville Building And Loan Association is an FDIC-insured bank (FDIC certificate #28103). Deposits are federally insured up to $250,000per depositor, per ownership category — regardless of this institution's Trust Grade. The grade reflects financial strength and complaint history for comparison, not the safety of insured deposits.

Collinsville Building And Loan Association: frequently asked questions

Is Collinsville Building And Loan Association a good bank?

Collinsville Building And Loan Association earns a Bankzia Trust Grade of A (91/100, "Excellent"), based on a financial-strength score of 91/100 (it has no CFPB complaints on record). Strongly capitalized (29.7% capital ratio); Profitable (ROA 0.06%).

Is Collinsville Building And Loan Association FDIC-insured?

Yes. Collinsville Building And Loan Association is a FDIC-insured bank (FDIC certificate #28103). Deposits are protected up to the standard FDIC limit of $250,000 per depositor, per ownership category.

How big is Collinsville Building And Loan Association?

Collinsville Building And Loan Association holds $116 million in total assets, ranking 257th of 328 banks we track in Illinois. It operates 1 branch.

Does Collinsville Building And Loan Association have CFPB complaints?

No CFPB complaints against Collinsville Building And Loan Association appear in our data over the analysis window, which is typical for a bank of this size.

Similar Banks

Midland Federal Savings And Loan Association
bank · Bridgeview, IL · $116M assets
American Metro Bank
bank · Chicago, IL · $118M assets
The First National Bank Of Sparta
bank · Sparta, IL · $114M assets
The Granville National Bank
bank · Granville, IL · $118M assets
Central Savings, F.S.B.
bank · Chicago, IL · $119M assets
First State Bank Of Beecher City
bank · Beecher City, IL · $113M assets

Financial data from FDIC call reports; complaint data from the CFPB Consumer Complaint Database. Bankzia is an independent resource and is not affiliated with any government agency or financial institution. Figures are for general information, not financial advice.

From the Blog

View all guides →