KEY POINTS
  • Former vendors for Beam Financial, who say they are being unfairly blamed for customers being locked out of their accounts, have taken the company to court.
  • Beam offered above-market interest rates on FDIC-insured savings. But for months, some customers say they have been unable to access their money.
  • CNBC has learned that Beam owes $182,000 in taxes to Delaware, where it is incorporated, and that its corporate status has been revoked in Delaware and California, though the company says it is “operational.”
Beam aimed to let users earn higher interest rates on their money by engaging with its mobile savings app.

Thousands of customers of the savings app Beam, who have been unable to access their funds for months, remain locked out of their accounts despite the company's promise that all transactions would be processed by Oct. 30.

That's according to a lawsuit filed in an Ohio court by three Beam vendors who say they are being wrongly blamed for the delays.