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The APY and the interest rate are two key figures to know when storing money in a savings account or other interest-earning bank account.
Both are expressed as percentages, but an account’s APY gives you the full picture of how much interest you can earn on your money.
An interest rate is the amount of money – expressed as a percentage, such as 3.5% – that a bank or credit union pays you to use the money you’ve deposited.
Banks and credit unions set interest rates for savings and other deposit accounts, which are influenced by the benchmark rates set by the Federal Reserve.
An account’s APY includes compound interest, or “interest on interest.” All banks pay compound interest. This represents the total interest you earn both on the funds you’ve deposited and the interest you’ve gained in previous cycles. So, the higher the APY is on a bank or credit union account, the more interest you stand to gain.
Banks and credit unions generally display account APYs on their websites, advertisements and marketing materials. This information enables savers to an apples-to-apples comparison of how much interest they stand to earn across various financial products and institutions.
The interest rate is the percentage of interest applied to your balance during a certain period, such as each day or each month. APY represents the total interest you can expect to earn over a year by factoring in how frequently the interest compounds.
When you multiply the interest rate by the balance in a bank account, you come up with the basic interest rate. Let’s say your account balance is $10,000 and you don’t deposit any more money into the account. If the interest rate is 3.50% and compounds yearly, the total interest you’d accumulate after one year would be $350, giving you a balance of $10,350.
Now, let’s look at the same pool of money if the interest compounds daily. If you don’t add to or withdraw from that pot of money and the interest rate stays at 3.50%, you will have earned $356.18 in interest for an end balance of $10,356.18; an extra $6.18 compared to an account that doesn’t compound over the course of the year. This is because you’ll have earned interest on those little bits of interest that have been applied to the balance throughout the year, in addition to the starting balance.
You can use a savings calculator to determine how much your balance will grow based on your account’s APY. The table below shows how different compounding rates would affect savings over 10 years if the interest rate is 3.50% and the starting principle is $10,000.
Compounding Rate | Balance After 1 Year | Balance After 10 Years |
No compounding | $10,350.00 | $13,500.00 |
Yearly | $10,350.00 | $14,105.99 |
Quarterly | $10,354.62 | $14,169.09 |
Monthly | $10,355.67 | $14,183.45 |
Daily | $10,356.18 | $14,190.44 |
When you’re looking for a place to park your savings, skip the basic interest rate and look at the APY. Because it includes compound interest, the APY provides the broader picture of how much interest you can expect to earn.
While the APY and interest rate are important factors in choosing a savings account, you should also look at: