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5 thoughts on “Is a High Interest Checking Account Worth It?”

  1. Well…I don’t. Mostly because I have a small emergency fund (my monthly expenses are l.o.w. thanks to no rent, not utility bills, no car payment, etc) and everything else is invested.

    While we’re being honest, I’ve sucked it up at the teeth whitening deal. I bet i’ve done it about every other day. I went to the dentist today though and was told I must have excellent home care. Ha!

  2. I don’t have it for the same reason you don’t have it. It’s a pain in the butt. There are too many things to do before you can get that interest. I keep about $2,000 in the checking and transfer money to/from saving account as needed.

  3. Kevin, I thought about these banks that offer high interest rates but make you jump through hoops and you miss one, you erase anything accrued.

    I don’t think I can win. After a lot of research, I chose a bank that is free with no min. balance requirement, provides free checking and where I don’t have to use debit card for purchases.

    I wrote about this very topic.

  4. Hey Kev-

    I have PNCs Virtual Wallet ( which I love) it gives you 3 accounts (spend, reserve, growth) the spend and reserve make no interest, however the growth makes 1% up to 10K. I know it’s not much- but like you said it’s free money. The debit card they have runs on points and their credit cards run on the same points. The two can be linked (credit card earning 4 pts per dollar and debit earning 2) to get you the most bang for your buck…literally. The points add up to gift cards places, but also cash cards.

    No minimum balance for any of the accounts and you can move the money around within the three accounts. Also comes with a lot of sweet budgeting/tracking online tools to see where money is spent when the debit card is used.

    Just a suggestion. 🙂

  5. I don’t like hoops, so we only leave $1000-$2000 in our brick and mortar bank and the rest of our cash is at ING earning 1% and change. The majority of our savings are in the stock market either via individual stocks we chose or target date mutual funds with 80% in stocks…

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