That routing number belongs to Capital.
Capital owns routing number 011401533. 114 other institutions route payments through it.
115 institutions are associated with this routing number.
- Owner bank
Capital
View Capital guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
Truist
73 other routing numbers on file
View Truist guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
Citizens Bank
31 other routing numbers on file
View Citizens Bank guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
American Express
140 other routing numbers on file
View American Express guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
Fifth Third Bank
122 other routing numbers on file
View Fifth Third Bank guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
KeyBank
51 other routing numbers on file
View KeyBank guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
Ally Bank
33 other routing numbers on file
View Ally Bank guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
360 Federal Credit Union
1 other routing number on file
View 360 Federal Credit Union guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
717 Credit Union
1 other routing number on file
View 717 Credit Union guide →Supported by Check Supply - Routes through owner
A+ Federal Credit Union
1 other routing number on file
View A+ Federal Credit Union guide →Supported by Check Supply
And 105 more institutions route through Capital.
Mail a real paper check from the account that uses this routing number.
Check Supply connects to your bank account and mails a real paper check the same day — with optional Certified, Priority, or Express Mail. No printer. No envelope. No trip to the post office.
Disclaimer: this page is an independent directory by Check Supply and is not affiliated with the listed institutions.
An ABA routing number is a 9-digit code issued by the American Bankers Association and used by the Federal Reserve to route ACH transfers, wire transfers, and paper checks. Each number is assigned to a single financial institution of record.
The routing number itself is owned by one bank. Smaller banks, credit unions, and most fintechs do not have their own number — they process ACH and check traffic through a larger sponsor or correspondent bank, so their accounts appear under the sponsor's routing number. The owner is listed first above.
Routing number vs. account number vs. SWIFT, IBAN, and the rest.
Banks hand out a lot of numbers. Here's what each one is for, and when you'd use it.
- ABA routing number
- Format
- 9 digits
- For
- Identifies a US bank for ACH transfers, domestic wires, and paper checks.
- Example
- 021000021
- Account number
- Format
- 8–17 digits, varies by bank
- For
- Identifies your specific account within a bank. Never shared publicly.
- Example
- 000123456789
- Wire routing number
- Format
- 9 digits
- For
- Some banks use a different routing number for wires than they do for ACH. Confirm with your bank before sending a wire.
- Example
- 026009593
- Check number
- Format
- 3–5 digits, sequential
- For
- Unique identifier for each check you write. Printed in the top right and bottom right of the check.
- Example
- 1047
- SWIFT / BIC code
- Format
- 8 or 11 letters and digits
- For
- Identifies a bank for international wires. Used outside the US.
- Example
- CHASUS33
- IBAN
- Format
- Up to 34 characters
- For
- International Bank Account Number. Identifies a specific account in 80+ countries, but not in the US.
- Example
- GB29 NWBK 6016 1331 9268 19