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3 Types of Savings Accounts: Where to Stow Your Cash
Savings accounts, money market accounts and CDs are three types of accounts meant for saving cash.
Margarette Burnette is a NerdWallet authority on savings, who has been writing about bank accounts since before the Great Recession. Her work has been featured in The Associated Press, USA Today and other major newspapers. Before joining NerdWallet, Margarette was a freelance journalist with bylines in magazines such as Good Housekeeping, Black Enterprise and Parenting. She is based near Atlanta, Georgia.
Sara Clarke is a former Banking editor at NerdWallet. She has been an editor and project manager in newsrooms for two decades, most recently at U.S. News & World Report. She managed projects such as the U.S. News education rankings and the Best States rankings. Sara has appeared on SiriusXM Business Radio and iHeartMedia’s WHO Newsradio and has been quoted in The Salt Lake Tribune, The St. Paul (Minnesota) Pioneer Press and other outlets. She is based near Washington, D.C.
Wealth psychology expert and coach Kathleen Burns Kingsbury, founder of KBK Wealth Connection and host of the Breaking Money Silence podcast, is an internationally published author and speaker. As an expert on financial psychology, Kathleen has appeared on television and her work has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, "PBS NewsHour," Money magazine, Today Money, Forbes and CNBC. Kathleen served as an adjunct faculty member at the McCallum Graduate School at Bentley University from 2009 to 2019 and currently teaches at Champlain College.
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Types of savings accounts
Banks typically have three kinds of savings accounts:
Regular savings account: earns interest and offers quick access to funds.
Money market account: earns interest and may provide check-writing privileges and ATM access.
Certificate of deposit, or CD: usually has the highest interest rate among savings accounts, but no access to funds until the term ends without potentially incurring a penalty.
Compare top savings accounts
Find a high-yield savings account with a great rate. Compare rates side-by-side.
Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of June 17th, 2025. Start earning 2.50% APY, then qualify to earn 5.00% APY on your balance up to $5,000.00 and 2.50% APY on balances over $5,000 next month by 1) Receiving direct deposit(s) totaling $1,000 or more; and 2) Ending the month with a positive balance in all your Varo Accounts. No fees, no minimums required. Rates subject to change at any time.
This offer is only valid for a new Premium Savings Account (“PSA”). The Promotional Annual Percentage Yield (“Promotional APY”) will be automatically applied to the account, and will remain effective for 180 days (the “Promotion Period”), after which it will automatically revert to the Standard Annual Percentage Yield (“Standard APY”) without requiring any action from you. Accounts must be opened by 6/9/26 to qualify for the Promotional APY. No minimum balance required, and the offer may be withdrawn at any time. Excludes non-U.S. residents, and residents of any jurisdiction where this offer is not valid. Other restrictions may apply. Please visit etrade.com/premiumsavings for more information.
These cash accounts combine services and features similar to checking, savings and/or investment accounts in one product. Cash management accounts are typically offered by non-bank financial institutions.
The Base Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is 3.30% (from program banks) as of 1/30/26 and is subject to change. Eligible new clients can get a 0.75% APY boost over the base APY for 3 months on up to a $150k balance. The Direct Deposit Plus Investing Program from Wealthfront Advisers LLC and Wealthfront Brokerage LLC provides eligible clients a 0.25% APY increase above the base APY on eligible Cash Account balances. Wealthfront may change or end the program at any time and determine eligibility at its discretion. Terms apply. Full details at wealthfront.com/promo-terms. Cash Account offered by Wealthfront Brokerage LLC, Member FINRA/SIPC, and is not a bank. Base APY is representative, variable, and requires no minimum. Individual experiences and outcomes will differ. NerdWallet receives compensation from Wealthfront for referring clients through paid ads, which creates a conflict of interest; NerdWallet is not a client. Investing involves risks. Securities are not bank deposits, bank-guaranteed or FDIC-insured, and may lose value. Investment management and advisory services provided by Wealthfront Advisers LLC, an SEC-registered investment adviser.
Annual percentage yield (variable) is 3.25% as of 12/12/25, plus a 0.75% boost (“APY Boost”) on balances up to $1M for new clients with a qualifying deposit. $10 min deposit for base APY. Terms apply (betterment.com/boost); if the base APY changes, the Boosted APY will change. Cash Reserve offered by Betterment LLC and requires a Betterment Securities brokerage account. Betterment is not a bank. Learn More (https://www.betterment.com/cash-portfolio).
CDs (certificates of deposit) are a type of savings account with a fixed rate and term, and usually have higher interest rates than regular savings accounts.
All Bread Savings APYs are accurate as of 05/21/2026. APYs are subject to change at any time without notice. Offers apply to personal accounts only. Fees may reduce earnings. To open a CD, a minimum of $1,500 is required and must be deposited in a single transaction. A penalty will be imposed for early withdrawals on CDs. At maturity, your CD will automatically renew and earn the base interest rate in effect at that time. Rates are compared against competitor rates published by NerdWallet.com and the institutions themselves as of 05/21/2026. NerdWallet.com obtains the data from the various banks that it tracks and its accuracy cannot be guaranteed.
Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is subject to change at any time without notice. Offer applies to personal non-IRA accounts only. Fees may reduce earnings. For CD accounts, a penalty may be imposed for early withdrawals. After maturity, if your CD rolls over, you will earn the offered rate of interest in effect at that time. Visit synchrony.com/banking for current rates, terms and account requirements. Member FDIC.
Annual Percentage Yield (APY). APY may change at any time and fees may reduce earnings. Please visit etrade.com/ratesheet for more information. The $15 monthly account fee can be waived when you maintain an average monthly balance of at least $5,000 in the account on or after the end of the second calendar month from opening the account.
Rates and minimum balance: Traditional banks have savings rates as low as 0.01% annual percentage yield. At that APY, an account with a $100 balance would earn a penny in interest after a year; an account with $10,000 would earn $1 in that timeframe. Traditional savings accounts also tend to have monthly fees of $5 or more that can only be waived by meeting certain requirements, such as keeping a minimum daily balance.
However, other banks, particularly online banks, have high-yield savings accounts that offer above 3% APY with no minimum balance requirement and no monthly fees. So you can open a high-rate account with any amount. Online banks offer federally insured accounts, just as their brick-and-mortar counterparts do. (Federal insurance is what protects your money in the event that a bank collapses.)
Account access: You can typically withdraw your money at any time. Certain "convenient" withdrawals and transfers, including online transactions, may be limited to six times per month. ATM withdrawals and in-person requests at a branch generally aren’t subject to these limits.
What to know: If you need to access your money for everyday spending more than you need to maximize APY earnings, consider opening a checking account instead.
In 2020, the Federal Reserve removed the requirement for banks to have a monthly limit of six convenient withdrawals for savings accounts and money market accounts. But many banks have kept the limit in place.
Money market accounts
Higher balance requirements, some check-writing privileges
Rates and minimum balance:Money market accounts, also called money market deposit accounts, tend to earn similar rates as savings accounts; but they typically require a higher balance, such as $1,000 or more, to avoid monthly fees. The best money market accounts, though, have low to no minimums and no monthly fees.
Account access: Money market accounts usually have the same withdrawal options as savings accounts, but some also come with a debit card or checkbook. However, banks may enforce the six-per-month withdrawal cap for savings accounts, so purchases would still be limited.
Top interest rates, no access to funds until maturity
Rates and minimum deposit: CDs tend to have the highest interest rates of the three types of savings accounts. Some banks have CDs with no minimum opening deposit requirements. Unlike other savings accounts, your first deposit tends to be your only deposit. CDs generally don’t charge a monthly fee.
Account access: None. When you open a CD, you agree to not withdraw the money for a certain period of time, called a term. If you take money out before then, you’ll likely pay an early withdrawal penalty. (The exception is a no-penalty CD.) Once a CD matures, or ends, you tend to have a limited time window — such as seven to 10 days — to withdraw the money penalty-free before a CD automatically renews for the same or similar term.
What to know: CD terms typically range from three months to five years or more. You’ll find some of the most competitive CD rates at online banks and credit unions.
Similar to savings accounts
Some nonbank accounts can help you save your money. Here’s a look at a type of account you can find at a brokerage.
Cash management accounts
Offered by investment firms, not a bank account
Rates and minimum balance:Cash management accounts, or CMAs, tend to have interest rates that are comparable to or slightly lower than regular savings accounts. CMAs typically have no minimum balance requirement.
Account access: Depositing and withdrawing cash is a challenge with some CMAs, but electronic transfers between CMAs and external bank accounts are usually easy.
What to know: CMAs have similar features to checking and savings accounts, but they're not actually bank accounts. CMAs are offered by nonbank financial service providers — like robo-advisors, investment firms and other financial firms — that sweep customer funds into partner bank accounts in order to provide FDIC coverage behind the scenes.
According to NerdWallet’s April 2026 savings report, one in 10 Americans are holding onto more cash in a bank account than they think they should. The reason: they don’t know the right place to put the extra money. If your short-term savings is fully funded, it may be time to look at a longer horizon. For long-term goals, such as retirement or your kids’ college funds, consider Roth IRAs, 529 plans and other vehicles. These can be an important part of your savings strategy.