Why High-Yield Savings Accounts Are About to Get Less Attractiveand Where to Move Your Cash

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Lower interest rates could make holding too much cash increasingly costly over time. Kenishirotie /ShutterstockFor the past two years, high-yield savings accounts have been the darling of conservative investors. With rates above 5 percent annual percentage yield (APY), parking cash in an online savings account felt like free money—no market risk, no lock-up period, and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insurance to boot. But that golden era is ending, and savers who don’t adapt risk watching their real returns turn negative. Why Rates Are Coming DownThe Federal Reserve cut its benchmark rate three times in 2025, bringing the federal funds rate from its peak of 5.25 percent–5.50 percent to 4.50 percent–4.75 percent. Markets are pricing in two to three additional cuts in 2026, which would push the benchmark toward 3.75 percent to 4.00 percent by year-end.High-yield savings account rates track the federal funds rate with a slight lag. Accounts that were paying 5.25 percent APY in early 2025 have already dropped to 4.50 percent to 4.75 percent, and further declines are virtually certain. By the end of 2026, the most competitive high-yield savings rates will likely range from 3.50 percent to 4.00 percent.

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