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Checking vs. savings vs. high-yield — what to open first

Three account types cover almost everyone starting out. Here's what each is for and how to avoid the fees banks hope you'll pay.

Dad's Quick Take

Open a free checking account for spending and bills, a savings account for money you don't want to touch, and — once you've got a cushion — a high-yield savings account that pays real interest. Avoid any account with monthly fees you can't waive.

Checking: your day-to-day account

This is where your paycheck lands and your bills come out. Look for no monthly fee, no minimum balance, and a big free ATM network. A debit card comes with it. Don't keep more here than you need for the month.

Savings: money with a speed bump

A savings account keeps money slightly out of reach so you don't spend it by accident. It's the right home for your emergency fund and short-term goals. Traditional bank savings pays almost nothing in interest — which is why the next one matters.

High-yield savings (HYSA): same thing, better interest

An HYSA works just like savings but pays meaningfully more interest, often many times the national average. They're usually online banks. Your money is still FDIC-insured (protected up to $250,000), and you can transfer to your checking in a day or two.

Dadgree Decoder

FDIC-insured means the government protects your money (up to $250,000 per bank) even if the bank fails. If a place isn't FDIC-insured, that's a red flag.

Fees to dodge

Common questions

Which bank should I pick?

Any FDIC-insured bank or credit union with no monthly fee works. Credit unions and online banks often have the best terms and lowest fees.

How much should sit in checking?

Roughly one month of expenses plus a small buffer. Park the rest in high-yield savings where it earns interest.

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