Opening a savings account in 2026 takes about ten minutes online and a few key documents. The harder part is choosing the right account before you apply: compare the interest rate, any monthly fees, the minimum balance, and how quickly you can move money in and out. Gather a government ID, your address and contact details, and a funding source, then apply on the bank website or app. What follows is a general walkthrough — confirm any specific terms with the bank, since they change.
What to compare before you apply
The headline interest rate gets the attention, but four factors decide whether an account is actually good for you. Read all four, not just the rate.
| Factor |
What to look for |
Why it matters |
| Interest rate (APY) |
A competitive, ongoing rate, not a teaser |
A teaser that drops after three months is not the real rate |
| Monthly fees |
Zero, or a fee you can reliably waive |
A fee can quietly cancel out your interest |
| Minimum balance |
Low or none if your balance will vary |
High minimums risk fees when money is tight |
| Access and limits |
Fast transfers, reasonable withdrawal rules |
An emergency account needs to be reachable |
If the rate language confuses you, the difference between the quoted rate and what you actually earn is worth understanding — see understanding APR vs APY.
What you need to open one
Most banks ask for the same short list. Having it ready is what makes the process quick.
- A government-issued photo ID (passport, driver license, or national ID).
- Personal details: legal name, date of birth, address, and a tax or social security number where required.
- A way to fund the account — a linked checking account, debit card, or transfer details.
- An email and phone number for verification.
Step by step
- Pick the account using the four factors above. An online-only bank often pays more because it has lower overhead.
- Start the application on the bank website or app and enter your personal details.
- Verify your identity. This is usually instant, occasionally a short manual review.
- Link a funding source and make an opening deposit — sometimes as little as one dollar.
- Confirm two small test deposits if the bank uses them to verify your linked account, then set up an automatic transfer so the account actually grows.
That last step is the one most people skip and the one that matters most. A saving habit beats a saving account; pairing the two is covered in how to set up automatic savings.
What to skip
- Accounts with unavoidable monthly fees. Plenty of solid accounts charge nothing.
- Chasing a teaser APY. Check whether the rate is promotional and what it reverts to.
- High minimum balances if your balance will swing, since dipping below can trigger fees.
- Opening five accounts at once. One good account you actually fund beats a collection you ignore.
FAQ
How long does it take to open a savings account?
Online, often under ten minutes for the form, with identity verification usually instant. A small verification deposit can take one to three business days to confirm.
Do I need money to open a savings account?
Many accounts have no minimum opening deposit, while others ask for a small amount. Check the specific account before applying.
Is an online savings account safe?
A reputable online bank that is properly insured is as safe for deposits as a branch bank, up to the insured limit. Verify the insurance and the bank reputation yourself.
Can I have more than one savings account?
Yes, and some people use separate accounts for separate goals. Just watch for per-account fees and minimums.
Where to go next
For related reading see How to choose a bank in 2026, How to set up automatic savings in 2026, and How to make a money saving plan in 2026.