Investing

Why High-Yield Savings Accounts Are About to Get Less Attractive—and Where to Move Your Cash

BY Due TIMEMay 15, 2026 PRINT

For 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 Down

The 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.

That matters because inflation is running at 3.2 percent as of Q1 2026. At a 3.75 percent savings rate and 3.2 percent inflation, your real (inflation-adjusted) return is just 0.55 percent. Factor in taxes on the interest income, and your after-tax real return could easily be zero or negative.

The Window for Locking in Higher Rates

If you have cash earmarked for specific goals within the next one to five years, now—not later—is the time to lock in higher yields before rates fall further. Several vehicles offer this opportunity:

Certificates of Deposit (CDs). Current CD rates for 12-month terms range from 4.25 percent to 4.75 percent, with some credit unions offering promotional rates above 5 percent. Two-year and three-year CDs are yielding 4.00 percent to 4.50 percent. By purchasing CDs now, you lock in today’s rate regardless of future Fed cuts.

A CD ladder—splitting your cash across 6-month, 12-month, 18-month, and 24-month CDs—provides both rate protection and periodic liquidity as each CD matures. This strategy hedges against both rising and falling rate environments.

Treasury securities. U.S. Treasury bills, notes, and bonds are available directly through TreasuryDirect.gov with no middleman fees. Current yields are competitive with or above CDs: 3-month T-bills at 4.35 percent, 1-year T-bills at 4.20 percent, and 2-year Treasury notes at 4.05 percent. Treasury interest is exempt from state and local income tax, making the effective yield even more attractive for residents of high-tax states.

I Bonds. Series I Savings Bonds adjust their rate every six months based on inflation. The current composite rate is 3.11 percent, which will reset in May 2026. While the current rate is below high-yield savings, I Bonds guarantee you’ll keep pace with inflation—a feature that becomes increasingly valuable as nominal savings rates decline.

Beyond Cash: Where to Redirect Excess Savings

If you’ve been accumulating cash in high-yield savings beyond your emergency fund and near-term needs, the declining rate environment is a prompt to reassess:

Pay down high-interest debt. If you’re simultaneously holding high-yield savings at 4.5 percent and carrying credit card debt at 22 percent, the math is brutally clear. Every dollar moved from savings to debt payoff earns an effective 22 percent return—five times what your savings account pays. Prioritize your highest-rate debt first.

Fund tax-advantaged accounts. If you haven’t maxed out your Roth IRA ($7,000 for 2026, $8,000 if 50+), 401(k) ($23,500), or health savings account (HSA) ($4,300 individual, $8,550 family), redirecting excess cash to these accounts provides tax benefits that more than compensate for the yield differential. The Roth opportunity in the current tax environment is particularly compelling.

Consider short-term bond funds. Short-term bond exchange-traded funds (ETFs) like the Vanguard Short-Term Bond ETF (BSV) and iShares 1-3 Year Treasury Bond ETF (SHY) offer yields in the 4 percent to 4.5 percent range with modest price volatility. While not risk-free like savings accounts, they provide slightly higher yields and the potential for capital appreciation if rates decline as expected.

Dividend-paying stocks. For money you won’t need for more than five years, dividend ETFs offer yields comparable to high-yield savings (3 percent to 4 percent) with the added benefit of dividend growth and capital appreciation potential. The trade-off is short-term price volatility—but for long-term money, that volatility is the price of higher expected returns.

What to Keep in High-Yield Savings

High-yield savings accounts remain the best vehicle for two specific purposes, even as rates decline:

Your emergency fund. Six to twelve months of expenses should remain in a fully liquid, FDIC-insured account regardless of the rate. The purpose of an emergency fund is immediate access and capital preservation, not return maximization.

Known expenses within 12 months. Money earmarked for a specific purchase or expense within the next year—a vacation, tax payment, insurance premium, or down payment—belongs in savings where there’s zero risk of loss.

Everything else should be working harder. Knowing exactly how much cash you need on hand prevents both the risk of being underprepared and the opportunity cost of overallocating to low-yield accounts.

The Behavioral Trap of Cash Hoarding

The past two years of 5 percent-plus savings rates created a dangerous behavioral pattern: cash hoarding disguised as financial prudence. When savings accounts pay more than long-term bond averages, holding excess cash feels smart. But as rates normalize, that cash drag becomes increasingly costly.

Historical data from Morningstar shows that investors who maintain excessive cash positions (above 20 percent of their portfolio) consistently underperform balanced portfolios by 2 to 3 percentage points annually over 10-year periods. The psychological comfort of cash comes at a measurable financial cost.

The Bottom Line

High-yield savings accounts aren’t becoming bad—they’re becoming normal. The 5 percent-plus rates of 2024–2025 were historically anomalous, and their decline was inevitable. Smart savers will lock in current rates where possible through CDs and Treasuries, redirect excess cash to higher-returning vehicles, and maintain savings accounts for their proper purpose: emergency reserves and short-term goals. The era of earning stock-like returns on risk-free cash is ending. Adjust accordingly.

By Peter Daisyme

The views and opinions expressed are those of the authors. They are meant for general informational purposes only and should not be construed or interpreted as a recommendation or solicitation. The Epoch Times does not provide investment, tax, legal, financial planning, estate planning, or any other personal finance advice. The Epoch Times holds no liability for the accuracy or timeliness of the information provided.

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