Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Should you switch accounts for a better yield?

- By Lisa Gerstner Lisa Gerstner is a contributi­ng editor at Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine. For more on this and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.

Interest rates on savings accounts often fluctuate, making the hunt for the highest yield on your savings stash a cat-andmouse game.

If your account’s yield falls, is it worth switching to a different account offering a better rate? After all, the new account’s yield could drop at any time, too.

Doing some math can help you make the call. Say you have $10,000 in a savings account with a rate that recently dropped to 0.4%. Over the next year, you’ll earn about $40 in interest if the rate remains steady. If you move the money to an account yielding 0.7% — one of the top rates available as of late — you’ll earn about $70 in interest over a year, or $30 more, if the yield stays the same (but that’s a big if ).

If you hold a bigger balance, switching becomes more compelling. “The more you have in the savings account, the larger the difference, and that can make even a small rate advantage worthwhile,” says Ken Tumin, founder of DepositAcc­ounts.com.

Using the example above but with a $50,000 balance, you’d earn about $150 more in interest by moving your money to the higher-yielding account. With a $100,000 balance, the difference is about $300. You can run the numbers by visiting Investor.gov, hovering over the “Financial

Tools & Calculator­s” tab and selecting “Compound Interest Calculator.”

Look for consistenc­y. Accounts that have reliably offered strong yields in the past are more likely to continue providing above-average rates than those that occasional­ly dangle chart-topping yields to attract customers. To see a list of the highest-yielding accounts in your area, visit www.depositacc­ounts.com/savings. For each account, you can click on “Details” to see its rate history.

Tumin notes that in an index of 10 well-establishe­d online savings accounts that DepositAcc­ounts tracks, the no-fee accounts from Live Oak Bank (www. liveoak bank.com; 0.6% yield), SFGI Direct (www.sfgidirect.com; 0.56% yield) and Synchrony (www.synchronyb­ank. com; 0.55% yield) recently offered rates higher than the index average of 0.49%, and they’ve had above-average rates for the past three and a half years, too.

For the latest savings yields and loan rates, visit kiplinger.com/links/rates. For Kiplinger’s top-rated rewards cards, go to kiplinger.com/links/cards20.

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