Savings account interest rates are best in years, experts say. How to get a high yield.

Corrections and Clarifications: An earlier version of this story mischaracterized the competitiveness of Capital One's savings-account interest rates. The reference has been removed.

Once upon a time, banks rewarded customers who opened savings accounts with stuffed lions, canvas totes — and interest. Lots of it.

Those days are gone. The average savings account now yields about 0.45% annual interest, according to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Rates remain stubbornly low for savers even as banks charge ever-steeper rates to borrowers: The prime lending rate — the interest that banks charge their most creditworthy customers — stands at 8.5%, its highest mark in two decades.

"Most consumers have not realized that they're being taken advantage of," said Odysseas Papadimitriou, CEO of WalletHub, the consumer finance site. "Unfortunately, the bigger the bank, the higher the likelihood that you're not getting a fair interest rate."

As a rule, savings account interest rates rise and fall with the prime rate. The more banks earn from borrowers, the more they can afford to reward depositors. When the Fed raises rates, banks tend to respond by paying more interest on their "high-yield" savings accounts.

But that system has broken down in the past 18 months. The Fed raised the benchmark Federal Funds Rate from effectively zero to over 5%, a two-decade high. Banks did not follow suit.

“The banks have not kept up,” said Jeff Farrar, a certified financial planner and managing director of Procyon Partners in Connecticut.

Why not try to attract new customers and their money?

Once upon a time, banks rewarded customers who opened savings accounts with stuffed lions, canvas totes – and interest. Lots of it. Those days are gone.
Once upon a time, banks rewarded customers who opened savings accounts with stuffed lions, canvas totes – and interest. Lots of it. Those days are gone.

Because big banks are flush with deposits. That is partly a result of the pandemic and federal stimulus campaign, which encouraged the nation to save. And it’s partly consumer inertia. Bank customers trust the big brands, and they tend to stay put.

Customers don't change savings accounts

“We found that, on average, Americans have had the same checking account for 17 years,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate. “And banks know it well. It’s a very ‘sticky’ business.”

Big banks, such as Bank of America and Citibank, “don’t compete on rates,” Rossman said. “They compete on national advertising campaigns. They put their names on stadiums.”

In a 2023 survey of 3,674 adults, Bankrate found that only 1 saver in 5 earned an interest rate of 3% or higher, he said. “And 3% is a pretty low bar.”

Savers can do better, he said. The market offers several ways for people to park their money and earn 4% or even 5% interest. That's an additional $400 or $500 a year on a $10,000 deposit.