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Home » Blog » Savers Move Cash To Higher Yields
Personal Finance

Savers Move Cash To Higher Yields

Morgan Ritchson
Last updated: May 9, 2026 8:32 pm
Morgan Ritchson
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With interest rates still rewarding cash, a growing number of savers are shifting money out of low-yield accounts and into options that pay more without adding risk. The appeal is simple: keep emergency funds safe while earning a stronger return.

Contents
Why This Matters NowSafe Places To Earn MoreWhat Experts EmphasizeRisks, Trade-Offs, And TaxesHow Savers Are AdaptingWhat To Watch Next

“If your savings are just sitting in a basic account, you’re leaving money on the table,” said one adviser in a recent discussion. The guidance points savers to federally insured accounts and U.S. government debt that protect principal while paying meaningfully higher yields than many brick-and-mortar banks.

Why This Matters Now

After the Federal Reserve raised rates sharply from 2022 into 2024, cash yields climbed. Yet many households still park money in basic savings accounts that pay only a fraction of what is available elsewhere. FDIC data in late 2024 showed the national average savings rate under 0.5%. Top online banks were offering rates many times higher.

That gap translates into real money. On $10,000, a difference of three percentage points is roughly $300 a year. For larger emergency funds, the shortfall can rival a monthly bill.

Safe Places To Earn More

Savers who want no credit risk have several choices. Each comes with trade-offs in access and rate stability, but all protect principal when used as intended.

  • High-yield savings accounts: FDIC- or NCUA-insured up to legal limits. Rates are variable and can change, but access is easy.
  • Certificates of deposit (CDs): Fixed rates for a set term. Early withdrawals can trigger penalties, so match the term to your needs.
  • U.S. Treasury bills and notes: Backed by the U.S. government. Short terms offer steady, competitive yields and can be bought at TreasuryDirect or via brokerages.
  • I Bonds: Inflation-linked savings bonds with annual purchase limits. They require a 12‑month hold and a small interest penalty if redeemed in years one to five.
  • Treasury money market funds: Invest only in government securities. Not bank-insured, but they hold very low credit risk assets and aim to keep a stable price.

What Experts Emphasize

“Here’s where to move it to earn a great return without any risk,” the adviser added, pointing to insured bank accounts and U.S. government debt as first stops for idle cash.

Banking analysts note that big banks often pay less because customers value branch access and bundled services. Online banks compete on rate, which helps explain persistent gaps. Consumer advocates say to confirm deposit insurance, watch for teaser rates that drop, and avoid accounts with fees that offset yield.

On Treasuries, bond strategists highlight convenience. Investors can ladder short-term bills and roll them at maturity. That keeps cash working while preserving access. I Bonds, they add, help against inflation, but purchase limits and the lockup mean they fit long-term reserves, not monthly expenses.

Risks, Trade-Offs, And Taxes

None of these tools protect against inflation in real time except I Bonds. Variable-rate accounts can adjust lower if the Fed cuts rates. CDs protect your rate but reduce flexibility. Money market funds target stability but are not bank-insured.

Interest from bank accounts, CDs, and most Treasuries is taxable at the federal level. Treasury interest is usually free from state and local tax, which can help residents of high-tax states. Savers should place emergency funds where they can reach them fast, then seek higher yields on the next dollar.

How Savers Are Adapting

Financial planners describe a simple, tiered approach gaining traction:

  • Keep one to three months of expenses in a high-yield savings account for instant access.
  • Place the next three to nine months in short CDs or Treasury bills for higher rates.
  • Use I Bonds for a piece of longer-term reserves if inflation protection is a goal.

This mix balances access, rate, and safety. It also limits the chance of selling at a bad time.

What To Watch Next

Two forces will shape cash returns from here: Federal Reserve policy and inflation trends. If the Fed cuts, variable account rates are likely to drift lower. Locking a portion in CDs can hedge that. If inflation stays sticky, I Bond rates may look better on the next reset.

For now, the easy win is clear. Verify insurance, compare yields, and move idle cash where it works harder without taking credit risk. The gap between “basic” and “better” accounts remains wide enough to matter.

The bottom line: match your cash to your needs, keep it safe, and do not settle for near-zero interest. A few careful choices can add steady dollars with little effort.

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