TACOMA, Wash.— New research from Filene, “Amplifying Your Credit Union’s Mission: Financial and Community Impacts of Being a CDFI,” is being cited as an example of how Community Development Financial Institution-certified (CDFI) credit unions can thrive.
Among those that contributed research to the project was CU Strategic Planning, which provides CDFI certification, grant application and strategy for credit unions.
The Filene research, which covers both quantitative and qualitative analysis, found CDFI credit unions experience higher:
- Asset growth
- Member growth
- Loan growth
- Loans outstanding
- Loan-to-asset ratio
- Interest income on loans
- Net worth
- ROA
- ROE
A Point of Emphasis

CU Strategic Planning noted the analysis emphasizes that there was no correlating increase in delinquencies nor net charge-offs among CDFI credit unions.
The research further includes information on impactful programs, best practices and strategies to help credit unions navigate the CDFI Program and “create the most impact with their CDFI status.”
The 2025 research is a follow-up to a 2015 study also published by Filene with CU Strategic Planning.
‘Reinforcing Each Other’
“This report highlights what we’ve long understood: that mission and margin can reinforce each other, especially when leaders design for both,” CU Strategic Planning President Stacy Augustine said in a statement. . “Filene’s work gives mission-driven credit unions confidence that serving deeper in their communities can create a virtuous cycle of safe, profitable growth.”
The report also:
- Highlights the increase in credit unions’ interest in becoming CDFIs. CDFI credit unions nearly doubled, from 241 in 2015 to 491 by the end of 2024.
- Notes that the past 10 years have seen “more external resources for credit unions to lean on for support, with several firms providing services aimed at helping credit unions solidify their CDFI strategies and applications.”
“We’re proud to have supported the research and to help credit unions put these insights to work,” Augustine added.
