Interest rates remain high, offering savers the opportunity to earn competitive returns with high-yield savings accounts. While rates have started to decline slightly from recent peaks, many banks — especially digital banks competing for deposits — continue to offer attractive APYs that were rare just a few years ago.
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Since signing up is as easy as downloading a free app, you might be tempted to cast a wide net and scatter your money among several different savings accounts. But when it comes to compounding your deposits, is there any real benefit to spreading your money around?
In most cases, probably not, according to one 15-year banking industry veteran who spoke with us.
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For Most People, One Is Enough
Nick Craven, senior vice president of commercial and consumer banking at TAB Bank, believes that quality is much more important than quantity when it comes to growing money in the bank.
“The best advice for most people is to have just one savings account,” said Craven. “Simplifying your financial life makes it easier to see where you stand in relation to your overall goals.”
More accounts don’t give you more money or hasten compounding. You should strive for the best available yield, and you can get that only once. The more accounts you have, the more complicated money management becomes and the more likely it becomes that you’ll make mistakes and incur fees.
Extra accounts increase your exposure to hacking or other attacks and, if you spread your money too thin, you can dilute your savings and fall short of tiered-yield minimums. For example, CIT Platinum Savings pays one of the best APYs in the country — but only for deposits of $5,000 or more. If your account falls below that minimum, the rate drops to just 0.25%.
Clearly, there are many reasons not to maintain multiple savings accounts. A few arguments say you should, but the one most often cited doesn’t make a lot of sense considering the alternative.
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Create Buckets, Not Accounts
GOBankingRates spoke with several experts who echoed common banking advice, which says that you’re more likely to achieve your savings goals if you open an account for each of them.
According to Forbes, “Setting up multiple savings accounts for each goal could make it easier to track your progress. And, when you need to tap into those funds, you can do so without worrying that you’re taking money away from another goal.”
But why open separate accounts for your emergency fund, wedding, vacation, home down payment, new car and the rest when so many banks let you partition your savings account into goal-themed buckets all in the same place?
Buckets serve the same purpose as multiple accounts but without the hassle. You can isolate your goals and set up automatic contributions to each according to a schedule, easily track your progress and contribute to or withdraw from one without affecting the others.
Pick One Right Savings Account and Make the Most of It
When researching accounts, savings buckets are one box you’ll want to check — but the most important feature is how hard it puts your money to work, which leaves nearly all big banks out of the running.
“In today’s market, a high-yield savings account is the best type of savings account for almost any circumstance,” said Craven.
Several banks pay 4% or higher. Craven’s own TAB Bank currently offers a high-yield savings rate that’s over 10x the national average and one of the best rates in the industry. Whichever you choose, make sure you read the fine print.
“Just make sure you’re not being enticed by a short-term teaser rate, or worse, an account that will slowly erode your principal through unnecessary fees,” said Craven.
Finally, you should look for a bank that does not penalize frequent transactions, payments or withdrawals. In the past, federal regulations prohibited more than six transactions per month for savings and money market accounts. But in April 2020, regulators dropped those restrictions and allowed consumers to treat savings accounts more like checking accounts with unlimited monthly transactions.
Even so, some banks still charge fees for excessive transfers. Find one that doesn’t.
Occasionally, More Than One Makes Sense
No one standard will be right for every person’s banking needs.
“Not everybody’s situation warrants the same advice,” said Craven. “Some people like to use multiple accounts because it mimics the old-school method of the envelope system.”
Beyond that, there are only a handful of times when you’d be wise to maintain more than one account:
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You’re wealthy or a super-saver with deposits that exceed the standard FDIC coverage of $250,000 for a single account.
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You want to back up a checking account with overdraft protection with a savings account that serves only that purpose.
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Closing an existing savings account would lead to a lower rate or loss of perks that a bank offers only to customers with multiple accounts.
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You have a joint account with someone like a spouse or business partner but want another independently.
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You’re pursuing an especially lucrative sign-up bonus.
Beyond that, most people would be wise to pick the one account that’s right for them and get as much out of it as they can while rates are still high.
“I advocate for maintaining a singular savings account with a routine schedule of regular deposits,” said Craven.
Laura Bogart contributed to the reporting for this article.
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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: I’m a Banking Expert: This Is How Many Savings Accounts You Should Have