Compare online savings accounts

Real APYs from online banks, ranked by rate. No minimum balance fees hidden in the fine print — we check.

Rates updated June 18, 2026
4.85%
top APY today
14
banks compared
Bank APY Min. balance Monthly fee
AF
Acorn Financial
High-yield savings · FDIC insured
4.70% APY
$0 to open
$0 no fee
View offer →

Why it's ranked here

Strong rate with a well-rated mobile app and 24/7 support.

Perks

  • Early payday (2 days)
  • Goal-based savings buckets

Good fit if

You want savings sub-accounts for different goals.

Watch for

Rate applies to balances under $250k only.

NP
Northpoint Direct New
Online savings · FDIC insured
4.55% APY
$100 min. balance
$0 no fee
View offer →

Why it's ranked here

New entrant offering a competitive rate to build deposits quickly.

Perks

  • $50 referral bonus
  • No-fee external transfers

Good fit if

You can keep a small minimum balance and want a new-bank welcome bonus.

Watch for

Fewer years in operation than older competitors.

HM
Harbor Mutual
Online savings · FDIC insured
4.40% APY
$0 to open
$5 waivable
View offer →

Why it's ranked here

Established regional online bank with strong customer service ratings.

Perks

  • Joint account support
  • Paper statements available

Good fit if

You want a bank with a longer track record and phone support.

Watch for

$5 monthly fee unless you maintain $300+ balance.

CW
Clearway Bank
Online savings · FDIC insured
4.25% APY
$0 to open
$0 no fee
View offer →

Why it's ranked here

Simple, no-frills savings account with a clean mobile app.

Perks

  • Instant transfers between own accounts

Good fit if

You want simplicity over bonus features.

Watch for

No checking account pairing offered yet.

Reading this table

APY is the annual percentage yield — what you actually earn in a year including compounding, not the simple interest rate.

Min. balance is the amount you need to keep in the account to earn the listed APY or avoid a fee.

Top Pick reflects our editorial ranking based on rate, fees, and account features — partners marked this way may also compensate us if you open an account.

Rates shown are pulled from provider data and can change daily. Always confirm the current rate on the provider's site before opening.

Common questions

Savings Accounts, explained

The interest rate is the simple yearly rate a bank pays. APY (annual percentage yield) factors in compounding — how often interest is added back to your balance — so it's almost always the more accurate number to compare across banks.

As long as the bank is FDIC-insured (or the credit union equivalent, NCUA-insured), your deposits are protected up to $250,000 per depositor, same as a traditional brick-and-mortar bank.

Online banks adjust savings APYs in response to broader interest rate conditions and competition with each other. It's common for rates to shift by 0.05–0.25% over the course of a few weeks.

We may receive a referral fee from some banks listed here if you open an account through our link. This doesn't change the rate you receive, and it doesn't influence how we rank or describe accounts.

Guides

Savings Accounts, explained in depth

5 guides on savings accounts — how it works, how to choose, and how to avoid common mistakes.

The 4.5%+ savings accounts worth switching for

A handful of online banks are quietly beating the rest by a full point. Here's how to tell if switching is actually worth the hassle.

Read more → (4 min read)

APR vs. APY: the difference that's quietly costing you money

Two similar-looking acronyms, two very different numbers. Here's how to read either one correctly before you sign anything.

Read more → (5 min read)

How savings account APY actually works

The number on the homepage isn't the whole story. Here's what APY really measures, and why two accounts with the same headline rate can pay differently.

Read more → (6 min read)

Online banks vs. traditional banks: what you actually give up

Higher rates are the obvious draw, but the trade-offs aren't always obvious until you've already made the switch.

Read more → (6 min read)

How to actually choose a savings account

Rate matters, but it's not the only variable — and chasing the top number alone can lead to the wrong account for how you actually save.

Read more → (6 min read)
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