The 9,000-strong RBS Shareholders Action Group has confirmed that it has accepted 82p a share.
It is almost double the original offer made by RBS.
The case will now go back to the High Court on Thursday where Mr Justice Hildyard will hear if it will proceed.
The
RBS Shareholders Action Group sent a letter to its members over the
weekend recommending the offer - which is less than the 92p a share
compensation some investors had hoped to secure.
It is also below the 200p-230p that investors paid to buy shares in the rights issue nine years ago.
"Having
carefully considered the merits of the current offer... we have decided
to accept the offer of 82 pence per share on behalf of our membership,"
the action group said in a letter dated 27 May that was published on
Monday."
It added: "This is a decision which is fully supported by our legal advisers."
The settlement is worth about £200m in total.
Court case adjourned
The case had been due to start on Monday, 22 May, and had been scheduled to last for 14 weeks.
However, it was adjourned and the parties began discussions over reaching a settlement.
The
dispute centres on RBS's decision, during the financial crisis, to ask
shareholders for billions of pounds worth of funds after it bought Dutch
rival ABN Amro.
Shortly afterwards, the government was forced to
prop up the bank with £45bn of taxpayers' money to save it from
collapse. The state still owns a 72% stake in RBS.
The bank and former directors deny any wrongdoing.
The bank has already settled the majority of claims over the issue, but has not admitted liability.
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