Nearly half of U.S. adults are sitting on a financial shortfall that has nothing to do with how much they earn. According to the FINRA Foundation's National Financial Capability Study, only 46% of Americans have set aside enough money to cover three months of living expenses, down from 53% just a few years ago.
And much of the money people do have saved is earning next to nothing. The average traditional savings account pays just 0.61% APY as of July 2026, while the best high-yield savings accounts are paying close to 4% APY, with identical FDIC insurance and zero added risk.
If you're trying to make extra money without taking on any new risk, this is one of the simplest, most overlooked places to start. The only meaningful difference between those two numbers is which bank holds the money.
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The dollar math is bigger than it looks
The gap between a traditional savings account and a top high-yield savings account, often called an HYSA, compounds quickly once you put real numbers behind it.
On a $10,000 balance, a traditional account earning roughly 0.5% generates about $50 a year. The same $10,000 in a top HYSA earning close to 4% generates roughly $400 a year, a gap of $350 on that balance alone. Scale that up to a household with $25,000 parked in a low-yield account, and the gap widens to roughly $875 a year, money that simply never shows up because of which institution is holding the deposit.
That figure compounds further the longer the money sits untouched. Left in place for five years, even without adding another dollar, the $25,000 in a top HYSA would grow to roughly $30,400 at a steady 4% rate, compared to about $25,630 in a traditional account earning 0.5%. The difference, nearly $4,800, comes from nothing more than choosing where to park cash that was already going to sit in a savings account regardless.
None of this requires extra risk. Both account types are FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per depositor, per institution. The underlying safety is identical. The only variable that changes is how much of the prevailing interest rate environment a given bank chooses to pass on to its depositors.
Why the gap is this wide right now
The size of this gap is not an accident of timing. The Federal Reserve held its target rate at 3.50% to 3.75% as of its June 2026 meeting, the fifth consecutive meeting without a change.
Online banks, which carry far lower overhead than traditional brick-and-mortar institutions, tend to pass a much larger share of that benchmark rate through to depositors. Traditional banks, with branch networks and legacy infrastructure to support, have historically passed through only a fraction of it, which is exactly why national average savings rates remain a small fraction of what online banks offer even when the underlying Fed rate is the same for everyone.
Inflation makes the difference even bigger. Money in a traditional savings account earning less than 1% loses purchasing power over time, while a high-yield savings account paying around 4% does a much better job of keeping up. It may not fully beat inflation, but it helps your money retain more of its value.
Why people don't switch, even when the math is obvious
If the gap is this large and the risk is identical, the natural question is why so few people actually move their money. Part of the answer may be psychological rather than purely financial.
Consumer sentiment hit a record low in May 2026, according to the University of Michigan's long-running survey, the weakest reading in data going back to 1978.
Periods of high financial anxiety and uncertainty tend to produce decision paralysis rather than action. When people feel financially stretched or anxious about the broader economy, moving money between institutions, even when the move is purely upside, often falls low on the list of things that get done.
But the barriers to actually making the switch are smaller than most people assume. Eighty-one percent of Americans with bank accounts already use mobile devices to manage their checking or savings accounts, according to the same FINRA data.
Most high-yield savings accounts can be opened entirely from a phone in a matter of minutes, with no branch visit, no paperwork, and no need to close an existing account before the new one is funded. The skill required to compare rates and move money is already a habit most people practice regularly for far smaller transactions.
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Bottom line
The 46% of Americans without an adequate emergency fund face a real structural challenge, but a meaningful share of the money already in the system is also underperforming for no good reason. Moving cash from a traditional savings account into a top-paying HYSA does not require new income, new risk, or new financial literacy. It requires comparing two numbers and acting on the obvious one.
For a household with $25,000 sitting in a low-yield account, the switch alone can put extra cash in your pocket without changing a single spending habit. Given that 81% of account holders already manage their money from a phone, and that opening a new account typically takes only a few minutes, the barrier here is not capability. It's simply getting started.
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