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In the United States, the Apple Card offers a high-yield savings account option, allowing you to earn far more interest on your money compared to the average bank's basic savings account. However, the account's interest rate was lowered this week, with the annual percentage yield (APY) dropping from 3.9% to 3.75%.

apple-card-savings-account-feature-1.jpg

If you deposited $1,000 into the account, and maintained that balance for one year, you would earn $37.50 in interest based on the current APY.

The chart below compares the Apple Card savings account's APY to some other popular high-yield savings accounts in the United States.

ProviderAPY*
Ally3.70%
Discover3.70%
American Express3.70%
Capital One3.70%
Citizens Bank3.70%
Apple Card Savings3.75%
Marcus by Goldman Sachs3.75%
SoFi3.80%
Barclays3.90%
PNC Bank3.95%
Synchrony4.00%
Betterment4.00%
Wealthfront4.00%
UFB Direct4.01%
CIT Bank4.10%
Fierce4.25%
Openbank by Santander4.40%
Pibank4.60%

* Advertised APYs as of March 26, 2025, excluding promotional rates and affiliate bonuses. Minimum balance requirements and other conditions vary per account. APYs can change at any time, so we cannot guarantee the accuracy of the rates listed above.

Apple launched its savings account in April 2023, in partnership with Goldman Sachs. The account can be opened and managed in the Wallet app on the iPhone, and it has no fees, no minimum deposits, and no minimum balance requirements. You must have an Apple Card, be a U.S. resident, and be at least 18 years old to open an account.

The account allows Apple Card holders to earn interest on their Daily Cash cashback balance, and on funds deposited via a linked bank account or an Apple Cash balance. The maximum balance allowed is $1 million, up from $250,000 previously.

When the account launched, Apple and Goldman Sachs offered an APY of 4.15%, but the rate has fluctuated, often in line with U.S. Federal Reserve benchmark rate changes. The APY peaked at 4.5% in early 2024, and the current 3.75% is an all-time low.

To open a savings account in the Wallet app, tap on your Apple Card, tap on the circle with three dots in it, tap Daily Cash, and select Set Up next to Savings.

Goldman Sachs may end its consumer lending partnership with Apple early, but it is unclear if this will have any impact on Apple Card holders. According to recent reports, there are at least three companies in the running to replace Goldman Sachs as the Apple Card's financial partner, including Barclays, Synchrony, and JPMorgan Chase.

Article Link: Apple Card Savings Account's Interest Rate Lowered
 
This follows yesterday's news that there will be one interest rate cut in 2025 due to tariffs (they were originally expecting two). The cut has not happened yet and most banks will not reduce their rates until the cut actually happens. Goldman is just jumping in early, as they do. This is why I happily stick with Wealthfront.

 
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Apple has become the most boring, predictable, and declining company over the last five years. It’s like Netscape—no ambition, no ‘wow’ moments, and taking every opportunity to screw over its users, even with its credit card and savings account. Such a stale company.

Just say you don't understand economics. Screw over its users? All rates are going down lol
 
Apple has become the most boring, predictable, and declining company over the last five years. It’s like Netscape—no ambition, no ‘wow’ moments, and taking every opportunity to screw over its users, even with its credit card and savings account. Such a stale company.
I mean, this has little-to-nothing to do with Apple here. Goldman Sachs is the financial institution that holds & services these accounts and rates have lowered across the board. You’re yelling at Chevy because your state taxes went up on your vehicle.
 
Apple has become the most boring, predictable, and declining company over the last five years. It’s like Netscape—no ambition, no ‘wow’ moments, and taking every opportunity to screw over its users, even with its credit card and savings account. Such a stale company.
Like it or not, Apple Vision Pro was kind of a WOW moment. Apple could've gone the easier route and made a basic headset viewer and game machine like Meta without any glimpse of spatial computing technology. They went all in so we'll see if it pays off over the next 5 years. But generally speaking, no large tech companies ever deliver anything exciting once they've locked in a golden goose. The most innovative releases usually come from startups and small challengers with something to prove or nothing to lose.
 
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In the United States, the Apple Card offers a high-yield savings account option, allowing you to earn far more interest on your money compared to the average bank's basic savings account. However, the account's interest rate was lowered this week, with the annual percentage yield (APY) dropping from 3.9% to 3.75%.

apple-card-savings-account-feature-1.jpg

If you deposited $1,000 into the account, and maintained that balance for one year, you would earn $37.50 in interest based on the current APY.

The chart below compares the Apple Card savings account's APY to some other popular high-yield savings accounts in the United States.

ProviderAPY*
Ally3.70%
Discover3.70%
American Express3.70%
Capital One3.70%
Citizens Bank3.70%
Apple Card Savings3.75%
Marcus by Goldman Sachs3.75%
SoFi3.80%
Barclays3.90%
PNC Bank3.95%
Synchrony4.00%
Betterment4.00%
Wealthfront4.00%
UFB Direct4.01%
CIT Bank4.10%
Fierce4.25%
Openbank by Santander4.40%
Pibank4.60%

* Advertised APYs as of March 26, 2025, excluding promotional rates and affiliate bonuses. Minimum balance requirements and other conditions vary per account. APYs can change at any time, so we cannot guarantee the accuracy of the rates listed above.

Apple launched its savings account in April 2023, in partnership with Goldman Sachs. The account can be opened and managed in the Wallet app on the iPhone, and it has no fees, no minimum deposits, and no minimum balance requirements. You must have an Apple Card, be a U.S. resident, and be at least 18 years old to open an account.

The account allows Apple Card holders to earn interest on their Daily Cash cashback balance, and on funds deposited via a linked bank account or an Apple Cash balance. The maximum balance allowed is $1 million, up from $250,000 previously.

When the account launched, Apple and Goldman Sachs offered an APY of 4.15%, but the rate has fluctuated, often in line with U.S. Federal Reserve benchmark rate changes. The APY peaked at 4.5% in early 2024, and the current 3.75% is an all-time low.

To open a savings account in the Wallet app, tap on your Apple Card, tap on the circle with three dots in it, tap Daily Cash, and select Set Up next to Savings.

Goldman Sachs may end its consumer lending partnership with Apple early, but it is unclear if this will have any impact on Apple Card holders. According to recent reports, there are at least three companies in the running to replace Goldman Sachs as the Apple Card's financial partner, including Barclays, Synchrony, and JPMorgan Chase.

Article Link: Apple Card Savings Account's Interest Rate Lowered
Pisses me off how quickly all these banks lower apy on savings when they are slow to lower apr on loans and credit cards.
 
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Pisses me off how quickly all these banks lower apt on savings when they are slow to lower apr on loans and credit cards.
That’s a valid point. Mortgage rates are about the same today as the average over the past 52 weeks:
https://www.freddiemac.com/pmms

Similar for car loans, etc.

However the federal reserve rates have declined in the same time frame:
https://tradingeconomics.com/united-states/interest-rate

I think banks are just tying savings account interest rates to their own rates, which follows the fed closely. Their consumer products like mortgages must have an even longer lag time.
 
Pisses me off how quickly all these banks lower apt on savings when they are slow to lower apr on loans and credit cards.
That difference is one way they make money.

It's called net interest income : net interest income is the profit banks earn from charging higher interest rates to borrowers than they pay out to depositors and account holders.
 
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This unfortunately doesn't keep up with inflation :(.

You pretty much have to invest money to stay afloat.

I... don't know. There are some good indications that indeed, it does.
 
All this is because treasury rate yields have been dropping. This is where banks get interest for short term fund accounts and then choose to pay the bulk of the rate they get to account holders.

You can always get treasuries yourself directly and cut out the middleman.
 
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