Why the best high-yield savings account may not come from a bank with a local branch

Looking for a high-yield savings account?

According to Motley Fool’s The Ascent, your best option right now might be SoFi, an online bank founded by Stanford business students. In The Ascent’s May report on high-yield savings, SoFi offers annual interest rates up to 4.6%.

WalletHub’s top pick is My Banking Direct, an online subsidiary of the recently embattled New York Community Bancorp. The personal finance site says My Banking Direct offers 5.55% interest.

In an era of historically high interest on savings accounts, many of the best rates come from banks that do not have a branch at the local strip mall.

Interest rates of 4% to 5% have become the norm on “high-yield” savings accounts in the past two years in response to the Fed’s dramatic campaign of interest rate hikes to curb inflation. Those lofty rates should persist for the foreseeable future after the central bank left its key rate unchanged at a 23-year high on Wednesday.

That said, not all savings accounts pay such high interest. As of April, the average national yield on such accounts was 0.57%, according to an institutional survey by Bankrate.

To cash in on those historically high rates, a consumer has to do some hunting.

Some of the top savings interest rates come from My Banking Direct, an online subsidiary of New York Community Bancorp.
Some of the top savings interest rates come from My Banking Direct, an online subsidiary of New York Community Bancorp.

Many of the best high-yield savings rates come from online banks

Many of the best rates are from online banks, institutions that operate online, with few or no brick-and-mortar branches.

My Banking Direct, a New York Community Bancorp subsidiary, offered the highest rate on Bankrate’s table of high-yield savings accounts last week, according to Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at the personal finance site.

“Is that an online bank or a brick-and-mortar bank? It’s kind of both,” he said, “but it has a much bigger reach online.”

The second-highest interest rate on the Bankrate list, 5.35%, came from BrioDirect.

“That’s actually the online version of Webster Bank,” a brick-and-mortar bank in Connecticut, Rossman said.

Online banks can offer some of the highest interest rates in the industry because they have lower overhead costs than big brick-and-mortar banks, industry experts say. Banks with lobbies and tellers cost money to operate.

Online banks have lower overhead costs

Many online banks can afford to pay high interest to depositors because they are collecting even higher rates from borrowers.

“Online banks generally specialize in higher-yielding loan products,” said Matt Frankel, a certified financial planner with The Motley Fool.

Ally Bank, an online bank with competitive rates on savings accounts, is largely an auto lender, Frankel said, with loans that fetch double-digit interest.