Greetings,
I am in a position to start saving $5,000 per month for the next year (or longer). While doing research about where to put this money I came to discover that APY is really not going to make that big of a difference. I'm totally new to this stuff, so I was hoping that some of the experts on this forum can verify that my logic is sound.
I used an online calculator to compare the three different accounts (can't post the link here because I am too new):
.20 APY = yield of $55, taxes of $18, for a total of $37
.50 APY = yield of $137, taxes of $46, for a total of $91
.80 APY = yield of $220, taxes of $73, for a total of $147
Is it really true that going from an APY of .20 to .50 will only generate an additional $54?
At this point, is it even worth it to consider switching banks in order to open a "high yield" account? (Assuming fees are all the same...)
Thank you so much for any replies!
I am in a position to start saving $5,000 per month for the next year (or longer). While doing research about where to put this money I came to discover that APY is really not going to make that big of a difference. I'm totally new to this stuff, so I was hoping that some of the experts on this forum can verify that my logic is sound.
I used an online calculator to compare the three different accounts (can't post the link here because I am too new):
.20 APY = yield of $55, taxes of $18, for a total of $37
.50 APY = yield of $137, taxes of $46, for a total of $91
.80 APY = yield of $220, taxes of $73, for a total of $147
Is it really true that going from an APY of .20 to .50 will only generate an additional $54?
At this point, is it even worth it to consider switching banks in order to open a "high yield" account? (Assuming fees are all the same...)
Thank you so much for any replies!
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