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The top savings rate is still 5.00% even after three Fed cuts, but most other high-yield savings rates have slipped.
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Of the two accounts that pay 5.00%, both cap that rate at $5,000 while requiring conditions that limit who can benefit.
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No-strings savings accounts pay as much as 4.60%, while CDs will let you lock in a rate of up to 4.50% for months or years into the future.
Even after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates three times last fall, the very top savings account rate hasn’t budged. The leading APY was already at 5.00% before the first cut in September—and it’s still there today, despite additional reductions in October and December pushing the federal funds rate down a total of 0.75 percentage points.
That doesn’t mean the broader savings market has been immune to the Fed’s moves. Looking across today’s best high-yield savings accounts, the collective ranking has gradually slipped. As of today, the 10th-best savings rate stands at 4.20%, while the 15th-best rate—the bottom of our top-15 list—was 4.02%.
Rewind a few months and the midrank accounts paid more. At the start of September, before the Fed’s first 2025 rate cut, the 10th-best savings account offered 4.40%, and the 15th-best paid 4.31%—about 20 to 30 basis points better than today. But while those rates have slipped, the top nationwide rate has held firm at 5.00%.
A headline 5.00% savings rate can look tempting, but limits and conditions can push your real return much lower. Understanding the trade-offs can help you earn more on your cash—and avoid rates that don’t scale with your savings.
Right now, just two high-yield savings accounts still advertise a 5.00% APY—and both come with requirements that make them a poor fit for many savers.
One is Varo Bank, which ties its top rate to several conditions. To earn 5.00%, customers must receive at least $1,000 a month in qualifying direct deposits, open and maintain a linked Varo Bank Account, and finish each month with positive balances across all Varo accounts. Perhaps most important, though, is that the 5.00% APY only applies to balances up to $5,000—any amount above that earns just 2.50%. Customers who don’t meet the requirements also drop to the lower rate.
The other option is AdelFi, a faith-based credit union. Opening an account requires joining the credit union, which includes accepting AdelFi’s statement of Christian faith. Even then, AdelFi’s 5.00% APY is also capped at $5,000. Balances between $5,001 and $10,000 meanwhile earn 2.25%, and anything above $10,000 earns a meager 0.35%.
