Financial abuse is present in 99% of domestic violence cases—affecting 1 in 4 women and 1 in 7 men —yet most financial institutions are not designed to recognize or safely respond to it. As a result, well-intentioned policies around account access, fraud detection, and verification can unintentionally create barriers for survivors, and expose institutions to risk. This session explores a four-year partnership between OnPoint Community Credit Union and FinAbility that addresses this gap through trauma-informed design, strategic funding, and role-appropriate collaboration. What began as a branch level relationship evolved into a structured partnership supporting staff learning, survivor-centered financial mentoring, and broader community resilience. The session emphasizes how centering the most vulnerable members strengthens systems for everyone.