Open for Business: Understanding the Fed's Discount Window
—Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
Introduction
In 1907, one of the largest trust companies in New York City, Knickerbocker Trust, did not have enough cash on hand to meet depositors’ demand for withdrawals. With no deposit insurance or lenders to turn to, Knickerbocker failed, triggering a series of bank runs throughout the financial system. The panic caused by Knickerbocker’s failure would ultimately lead to other bank failures and a deep recession.
This and other financial crises were the motivation driving Congress to pass the 1913 Federal Reserve Act to create the Federal Reserve System (the Fed). The Act specifically authorizes the Fed to lend to depository institutions when needed, to help them prevent these types of financial crises and liquidity failures.
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System’s website states that “lending to depository institutions plays an important role in supporting the liquidity and stability of the banking system and effective implementation of monetary policy.”
What Is the Discount Window?
The Fed is sometimes described as “a bank for banks.” This means the Fed offers services to depository institutions such as credit unions and banks, not unlike the way these depository institutions offer services to their customers. In this article, we’ll just use the word banks to describe all depository institutions.
For example, member banks can have accounts at their District Federal Reserve Bank. The funds in these accounts are called “reserves,” and the Fed pays banks interest on their reserves, just like customers at a regular bank receive interest on their accounts. Banks can also obtain short-term loans from the Fed’s “discount window” when they need funds for a short period of time. The interest the Fed charges for these loans is called the discount rate: It is one of the Fed’s administered rates and is a tool used to implement monetary policy.
The name discount window comes from the historic practice of banks sending representatives to Reserve Bank teller windows to access short-term loans. Today, banks do not need someone to physically go to a Reserve Bank to access this service.

Credit Discount Window at the St. Louis Fed, 1967. From FRASER, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; accessed January 1, 2025.
Why Would a Bank Need to Borrow Funds?
Banks make loans and in exchange receive interest payments, which they use to cover operating costs and to pay interest on customer deposits. Imagine that many people come into Mainstreet Bank at the same time to withdraw large amounts of money from their accounts. The bank has the assets to cover the withdrawals, but what if they do not have enough liquid assets to cover all these withdrawals? Cash is the most liquid asset and usually what customers expect to be paid in. Treasury securities are also considered liquid assets because they can be easily converted to cash with very little loss of value in the conversion process. On the other hand, non-liquid assets such as outstanding loans or real estate are more difficult to convert to cash without losing value in the conversion process.
The bank cannot pay its customers in non-liquid assets, so in this example the bank needs a short-term loan to cover these withdrawals. The bank can request a short-term loan from its District Federal Reserve Bank to cover the withdrawal requests; in exchange, the bank will pay the discount rate when it repays the loan. By borrowing from the Fed, the bank is able to relieve its temporary liquidity strain without having to sell its non-liquid assets.
How Do These Loans Work?
For access to the discount window, banks must have active agreements on file with their District Federal Reserve Bank. These agreements include provisions ensuring that the bank is eligible to borrow and understands its obligations when taking out a discount window loan. When a bank makes a loan request, it must show that it has adequate collateral. Collateral comes in many forms, including loans or securities that could be seized if the borrower fails to repay.
Using our earlier example, imagine the many cash withdrawal requests total $1 million. The bank does not have $1 million in cash on hand, but it does have $10 million in real estate assets, such as mortgages. Non-liquid assets such as these could be hard to sell quickly to cover the withdrawals, but they could serve as collateral for a discount window loan for the bank from the Fed.
As banks receive funds from loan payments and deposits, they repay their discount window loans to the Fed, sometimes as quickly as within a few hours or overnight. These short-term loans allow banks to continue to service their customers without disruption. See Figure 1 below.
Figure 1

NOTE: By taking a short-term loan through the discount window, Mainstreet Bank is able to operate without delaying service to its customers or losing value by trying to convert its non-liquid assets into a liquid asset such as cash.
The Fed Board’s website additionally states that “by providing ready access to funding, the discount window helps depository institutions manage their liquidity risks efficiently and avoid actions that have negative consequences for their customers, such as withdrawing credit during times of market stress. Thus, the discount window supports the smooth flow of credit to households and businesses.”
The Discount Window During Financial Crisis
In normal times, when reserves are plentiful in the banking system, the Fed’s discount window is typically not very active. See Figure 2 below. However, the discount window plays a very important role in supporting liquidity and financial stability during times of crisis. For example, in 2020, banks turned to the discount window seeking liquidity as the economy reacted to the severe economic shock caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. To be clear, the Fed typically uses several strategies to provide liquidity to the financial system during times of crisis, but the discount window stands ready to provide banks with loans to meet their financial needs in normal times and during crises.
Figure 2
![Static graph: FRED data series [WPC] for 2017-01-01 to 2022-01-07.](/-/media/project/frbstl/stlouisfed/publications/page-one/images/uploads/2025/2025-mar-poe-fig2.jpg?sc_lang=en&hash=E79FF67ED12277FF4E1A3E644226D56E)
NOTE: The use of the discount window remains relatively inactive until 2020 when the COVID-19 pandemic creates a spike in its use. This illustrates how banks turn to the discount window during times of financial stress.
SOURCE: Assets: Liquidity and Credit Facilities: Loans: Primary Credit: Week Average, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System via FRED, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis; accessed January 22, 2025.
The Discount Window as a Monetary Policy Tool
So far, we’ve described how banks can borrow funds from the Fed’s discount window to meet short-term liquidity needs, but banks can also borrow reserves from each other to meet liquidity needs. The interest rate that banks pay to borrow reserves from other banks is called the federal funds rate. The federal funds rate is determined in the market by the supply and demand for reserves. It plays an important part in the monetary policy process: The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) sets a target range in which it wants the federal funds rate to fall; in setting this range the Fed communicates its monetary policy position. When the Fed lowers the target range it pulls other interest rates down, making borrowing more affordable for consumers and businesses, which can give economic activity a boost during a downturn. Or, the Fed can raise the federal funds rate target range, pushing interest rates higher and decreasing the demand for goods and services when inflation is too high. See Figure 3 below.
Figure 3

By adjusting the administered rates, the Federal Reserve can affect market interest rates and overall financial conditions, helping achieve its goal of maximum employment and price stability. To learn more about the FOMC and how it targets the federal funds rate, click here.
The discount rate plays an important role in keeping the federal funds rate near the Fed’s target. Ihrig, Weinbach, and Wolla stated in their 2022 article, “Because banks will likely not borrow from others at a much higher rate than they can borrow from the Fed, the discount rate helps to curb any upward spikes in the federal funds rate.”
Conclusion
The discount window is an important tool in the Federal Reserve’s work to help promote stability and soundness in the financial system. It offers banks an opportunity to meet their short-term liquidity needs without major changes to services or disruptions to their customers.
Collateral: Property required by a lender and offered by a borrower as a guarantee of payment on a loan. Also, a borrower's savings, investments, or the value of the asset purchased that can be seized if the borrower fails to repay a debt.
Discount rate: The interest rate charged by the Federal Reserve to banks for loans obtained through the Fed’s discount window.
Discount window: Federal Reserve lending to depository institutions to support the liquidity and stability of the banking system and the effective implementation of monetary policy.
Federal funds rate: The interest rate depository institutions charge each other to borrow or lend reserves in the federal funds market; these funds are immediately available.
Liquid asset: An asset that is easily convertible to cash with relatively little loss of value in the conversion process.
Liquidity: The quality that makes an asset easily convertible into cash with relatively little loss of value in the conversion process.
Non-liquid asset: An asset that is not easily convertible into cash with relatively little loss of value in the conversion process.
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“Discount Window Direct (DWD) Frequently Asked Questions.” Federal Reserve Banks, FRBservices.org. Accessed October 23, 2024.
“Discount Window Lending.” Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Regulatory Reform. Accessed October 23, 2024.
“Federal Reserve System—The First 100 Years: A Chapter in the History of Central Banking.” Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, Education. Accessed January 22, 2025.
Ihrig, Jane; Senyuz, Zeynep and Weinbach, Gretchen. “Implementing Monetary Policy in an ‘Ample-Reserves’ Regime: The Basics (Note 1 of 3).” Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, FEDS Notes, July 1, 2020.
Ihrig, Jane; Weinbach, Gretchen and Wolla, Scott. “How are Banks and the Fed Linked? Teaching Key Concepts Today.” Review of Political Economy, March 29, 2022.
Ihrig, Jane and Wolla, Scott. “Lecture Guide: How the Federal Reserve Implements Monetary Policy.” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Resources for Teachers & Students, 2021.
Ihrig, Jane and Wolla, Scott. “How Does the Fed Use Its Monetary Policy Tools to Influence the Economy?” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Page One Economics, May 2, 2022.
“Making Sense of the Federal Reserve: Federal Reserve Discount Window Lending.” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Supervision & Learning. Accessed January 9, 2025.
Scaggs, Alexandra. “Banking Goes Back to the 1920s.” Financial Times, March 17, 2023.
“Section 10B. Advances to Individual Member Banks.” Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Reserve Act. Accessed January 9, 2025.
“The Panic of 1907.” Federal Reserve History, Time Period: Before the Fed, December 4, 2015.
Wolla, Scott. “A New Frontier: Monetary Policy with Ample Reserves.” Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Page One Economics, May 3, 2019. Accessed January 9, 2025.
Citation
Amanda Geiger, "Open for Business: Understanding the Fed's Discount Window," Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Page One Economics, March 3, 2025.
These essays from our education specialists cover economic and personal finance basics. Special versions are available for classroom use. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the St. Louis Fed or Federal Reserve System.
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