Ivy Bank Review: Savings and CDs

Ivy Bank is an online-only bank that offers savings accounts and CDs.
Margarette Burnette
By Margarette Burnette 
Edited by Yuliya Goldshteyn

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Ivy Bank
  • Savings
  • Certificates of deposit
  • Customer experience

Overall institution rating

4.0

NerdWallet rating 
The bottom line:

Ivy Bank is an online-only bank that offers savings accounts and certificates of deposit but no checking account. Its savings rates are strong and the accounts don’t charge monthly fees, but the minimum opening deposit requirements are steep. The bank is a division of Cambridge Savings Bank, which is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Note that California residents are not eligible to open an account at Ivy Bank.

Best for: Those who want an online savings account with a strong rate and no monthly fees, are not California residents and can meet the minimum deposit requirements to earn interest.

Pros

  • Competitive rates on savings accounts and some CDs.
  • No monthly fees on savings accounts.
  • Extended phone customer service hours.

Cons

  • High minimum opening deposit for savings accounts.
  • High minimum balance to earn a strong savings rate.
  • No cash deposit or withdrawal.
  • No checking account offered.

Full review

Savings

Ivy Bank High-Yield Savings Account
Ivy Bank High-Yield Savings Account

Savings

Member FDIC

4.0

/5
 NerdWallet rating 
APY
5.30%
With $2,500 min. balance for APY

Ivy Bank’s High-Yield Savings Account earns a competitive rate, but it has a minimum opening balance of $2,500, which is high compared with that of other online savings accounts with similarly competitive rates. While there is no monthly fee, you don’t want your balance to drop below $2,500. If it’s below that amount, you earn only a 0.05% annual percentage yield. If your balance goes below $10, your account won’t earn interest.

With no ATM network available, you can’t deposit or withdraw cash. To access your money, you’ll need to set up a transfer to an external account. In addition, you can only withdraw money to a linked account that you own — don’t expect to be able to send funds to friends and family via a service such as Zelle. Ivy Bank also imposes a limit of six withdrawals per month, and international transactions are not available.

Note that if you want to open a joint account, you’ll need to say so at the time of opening. If you own the account but later want to add someone to it, you’ll need to open a new one instead (other institutions let you add joint owners to existing accounts).

» Want to see more options? Check out NerdWallet’s best high-yield online savings accounts

Certificates of deposit

Ivy Bank CD
Ivy Bank CD

CD

Member FDIC

3.0

/5
 NerdWallet rating 
1-year APY
5.00%
3-year APY
3.25%
5-year APY
2.60%
Minimum deposit
$1,000

Ivy Bank offers a one-year CD that has a competitive rate. The $1,000 minimum opening deposit is somewhat high compared with that of other online banks. Note that when you open a CD, you generally can’t touch the deposit until the term ends. Read more about how CDs work.

» Ready to compare? Check out the best CD rates this month

Customer experience

4.5

NerdWallet rating 

You can reach customer service via phone, live chat and email. Representatives are available from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Eastern time Monday through Friday and from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. ET on Saturday. You can also reach out to Ivy Bank via Twitter. In addition, the bank offers mobile apps that let you do basic banking activities, such as transferring money electronically and depositing mobile checks.

Ivy Bank lets you opt in to a free service to view your credit score and offers an online money management tool that lets you see all your accounts in one place — even if they are at other banks — and set budgets, track income, track spending and see your net worth.

Methodology

NerdWallet’s overall ratings for banks and credit unions are weighted averages of several categories: checking, savings, certificates of deposit or credit union share certificates, banking experience and overdraft fees. Factors we consider, depending on the category, include rates and fees, ATM and branch access, account features and limits, user-facing technology, customer service and innovation. The stars represent ratings from poor (one star) to excellent (five stars). Ratings are rounded to the nearest half-star.