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HYSA Rates Are Falling: How to Stay Ahead

The Federal Reserve has held the fed funds rate at 3.64% for four straight months — but that pause comes with a 4-vote dissent at the May FOMC meeting and an inflation print that just re-accelerated to 3.29% year-over-year. Top high-yield savings accounts that were paying 5%+ a year ago now sit at 4.03% (Vio Bank), 4.00% (LendingClub, Bread Savings, Openbank), and 3.90% (EverBank). The big-name brands savers actually use are lower still: Marcus 3.50%, Capital One 360 and Ally 3.10%, American Express 3.20%. That 0.58% national average and 4.03% best-rate gap is worth $863 a year on a $25,000 emergency fund — the same balance, the same FDIC insurance, the same instant access. Real-yield math is harsher than 12 months ago: a 4.03% APY against 3.29% CPI leaves you with just 0.74% above inflation. Cash isn't the prize it was when the Fed funds rate was 5.33%, but it still pays. The savers who preserve the most yield through 2026 are the ones who rate-shop, ladder into T-bills and CDs where the curve allows, and don't leave $50K sitting in a 0.38% account because that's where their paycheque lands.

May 2, 2026Read More