Your Savings Account Is Failing: 3 Shifts to Reclaim Your Wealth
With inflation eroding purchasing power, here are three pivots to help you get back ahead of rising costs.
You've done everything right, and you're still losing ground. That's the sentiment many are feeling, as rising inflation takes bigger bites out of your paychecks when you pump gas, pay your electric bill or go to the grocery store.
It used to be that you could turn to a high-yield savings account to outpace it. Yet, with inflation at 4.20% and not likely to cool soon, most savings accounts don't earn returns keeping pace with inflation.
"It’s not just about earning interest," says Eric Bernstein, President of LendFriend Mortgage. "When your savings are sitting idle, you’re missing out on the compounding power that could strengthen your homebuying profile. For those targeting a purchase, inflation isn't just an annoyance — it's a direct reduction in your future purchasing power."
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Stop letting the status quo erode your wealth. Here are three strategic pivots to shield your cash from inflation and crush your debt for good.
1. Stop chasing yields
For a long time, savings accounts offered exceptional rates of return that outpaced inflation. In the interim, likely, those days are over. The ongoing war with Iran will keep fuel prices high. And even if there is a permanent resolution soon, energy prices might not stabilize fully into 2027.
The problem is that you need a high-yield savings account as part of your financial plan. Instead of shopping around for rates every few months, I'm recommending a savings account I've found that consistently offers good returns and has no monthly fees.
Once you reach your emergency fund and short-term savings goal, you want to shift your focus away from saving.
2. The debt-first pivot
Debt robs you of future wealth, especially if you're carrying high-interest debt. Credit cards and HELOCs also feature variable rates that can compound faster than any return you would earn on a savings account.
Therefore, when you view these debts as an emergency, you restore your purchasing power and improve your monthly cash flow.
Here's a debt repayment checklist to help you devise a plan that works:
- Make a list of all your outstanding debts, including balances owed, interest rates, etc.
- Use a budgeting app or a personal banker to see if you can free up any cash in your budget or curtail spending
- Use the Debt Avalanche method (focusing on the debt with the highest interest rate) first, or do the Debt Snowball, where you tackle your lowest balance to build momentum
- Set up automatic payments to ensure you never miss one
- Allocate any surplus cash from bonuses, commissions or tax refunds to pay off the debt with the highest interest rate first
- Review goals at least quarterly to ensure you remain on track to pay off debt
Along with debt repayment, now is a vital time to reevaluate how you approach buying everyday items.
Use the tool below, powered by Bankrate, to connect with a financial professional that can help you build a plan to reach your financial goals:
3. Spend with intention
Debt repayment takes center stage, but you must also plug any spending holes you have in your budget. To demonstrate, inflation won't show up as a line item in your budget, but rising per-unit prices create stealthy paycheck erosion.
I'm going to show you a few ways to rein in spending. First, everything in life seems to revolve around subscriptions, so this is a good place to start. Look for apps or memberships you haven't used much in the past few months and pause them. If you can go a few months without them, then you won't need them back.
And if you want to save on streaming moving forward, do this:
- Use your credit card and cell phone plan perks to lower total streaming costs
- Buy annual plans around Black Friday, where deals are usually the best
- Use shopping subscriptions like Walmart+, which offers a free membership to Peacock Premium or Paramount+ Essentials plan, you can switch options every 90 days
The next area is mastering the art of grocery shopping. Instead of impulse buying, plan meals. Shop ethnic markets for produce, as they tend to be cheaper and offer better quality than most grocery stores, in my experience.
Use warehouse clubs for pantry bulk supplies, where per-unit prices are often lower than at your regular markets.
Another tip seems simple, yet it's effective. Kiplinger personal finance writer Rachael Green reached out to her service providers to ask if they could lower her bills. She saved over $700 annually, so it definitely pays to reach out.
Lastly, if you find something you want to buy that isn't essential, implement the 24-hour rule. I do this often and find that after sleeping on it, I don't really need the item. This can help you rein in impulse spending, giving you more money to devote to debt repayment.
Ultimately, inflation can erode some of your purchasing power, but you can control its impact. The key is to move away from an all-savings strategy and implement other solutions impacting your finances.
Attacking high-interest debt with urgency and treating every dollar you earn with intention helps you not only save money but also buy back your financial freedom. These small shifts can help you weather the storm of higher prices so you can reclaim the ground inflation tried to steal.
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Sean is a veteran personal finance writer, with over 10 years of experience. He's written finance guides on insurance, savings, travel and more for CNET, Bankrate and GOBankingRates.