Savings Calculator
Grow your savings with confidence β model basic savings growth, plan for a specific goal, build your emergency fund, compare account rates side by side, and see how withdrawals impact your long-term balance. Five modes, live results.
Amount already in your account
What you add each month
Best HYSA: ~4.20% (Mar 2026)
US avg ~3% (2024β2026)
Enter your goal and see the required monthly deposit to hit it β plus how long you'll take at your current savings pace.
Vacation, down payment, fundβ¦
Target number of months
Financial experts recommend 3β6 months of essential expenses. Enter your monthly costs to see your current coverage and exactly how long to fully fund your safety net.
Min debt payments, healthcareβ¦
Keep emergency fund in HYSA
Compare four savings account types on the same deposit β traditional bank, high-yield savings, money market, and CD. See exactly how much more you earn by switching.
National avg (Mar 2026)
Best HYSA rate (Mar 2026)
Best MMA rate (Mar 2026)
Best 1-yr CD (Mar 2026)
See the real cost of a withdrawal β not just the dollar amount taken, but all the future interest that money would have earned.
Savings Calculator β The Complete Guide
Everything you need to know about savings β what savings is, how savings accounts work, why APY matters, how to build an emergency fund, and how to choose the right account for every goal. Clear, current, and honest.
What Is Savings?
Savings is the portion of your income that you set aside rather than spend immediately. It's the gap between what you earn and what you consume β the fundamental building block of financial security. Whether held in a bank account, a money market fund, or a certificate of deposit, savings provides a financial cushion for emergencies, a resource to fund future goals, and the foundation for long-term wealth creation.
Saving is distinct from investing: savings prioritises capital preservation and liquidity β your money stays accessible and doesn't lose value. Investing accepts more risk in pursuit of higher long-term returns. Both serve important roles. The classic personal finance sequence is: (1) build an emergency fund in savings, (2) pay off high-interest debt, (3) then invest the remainder for growth.
In the United States, savings accounts at FDIC-member banks are insured up to $250,000 per depositor per institution β meaning your savings are protected even if the bank fails. This government backing makes savings accounts one of the safest financial tools available to consumers.
Without savings, any unexpected expense β a medical bill, car repair, job loss β becomes a debt crisis. Savings converts income into security. Americans with 3β6 months of expenses saved experience significantly less financial stress and are better positioned to invest and build wealth.
When you deposit money, the bank pays you interest for the use of your funds. With compound interest, earned interest is added to your balance, and future interest is calculated on that larger amount β so your savings accelerate over time. Daily compounding earns more than monthly or annual compounding.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation covers up to $250,000 per depositor, per bank. If you have more than $250K to save, spread it across multiple FDIC-insured institutions. Most online high-yield savings accounts are fully FDIC insured β look for the FDIC badge when opening an account.
What Is a Savings Calculator?
A savings calculator is a financial tool that applies compound interest formulas to your specific numbers β starting balance, monthly deposits, APY rate, and time β and shows you exactly how your savings will grow. It makes abstract concepts like compounding and APY immediately concrete and actionable.
Most savings calculators available online (including Bankrate and NerdWallet's tools) answer a single question: "how much will I have?" The CatchyTools Savings Calculator goes significantly further with five dedicated modes that answer the questions those tools miss entirely:
- Basic Growth: Full compound savings projection with real inflation-adjusted value, year-by-year table, and balance breakdown.
- Goal Planner: Reverse-solves for the required monthly deposit to hit any goal in any timeline, and shows how long your current pace will take.
- Emergency Fund Builder: Enter your actual monthly expenses to calculate your exact target, coverage level, and months to fully fund your safety net.
- Rate Comparison: See all four account types β traditional bank, HYSA, money market, and CD β on the same deposit, with the best rate highlighted.
- Withdrawal Impact: Shows the true cost of a withdrawal β the amount taken out plus all the future interest that money would have earned.
Every result updates the instant you type β no "Calculate" button needed. Results scroll into view automatically on mobile.
Anyone saving for a specific goal β a vacation, down payment, car, wedding, or retirement. Also: people building their emergency fund who want to know how long it takes, and anyone comparing bank rates who wants to see the difference in real dollars rather than abstract percentages.
Real-time updates (no button press), inflation-adjusted real values, multiple account comparisons, goal reverse-solving, readable text, and honest results including the true cost of withdrawals. Most tools only show the optimistic number β a great calculator shows you the full picture.
Savings Account Types β March 2026 Rate Guide
Not all savings accounts are equal. The difference between a traditional bank account and a high-yield alternative can mean thousands of dollars over just a few years β on the same deposit, with the same FDIC insurance. Here's how the four main account types compare right now.
For the best liquid rate, a high-yield savings account is usually the top choice β FDIC-insured, fully liquid, and earning 10Γ the national average. If you have a fixed timeline (3, 6, or 12 months), a CD can lock in a rate that's immune to Fed rate cuts. For a blend of high rate with check-writing and debit access, a money market account is the middle ground.
How to Build an Emergency Fund
An emergency fund is a dedicated cash reserve set aside for unexpected expenses β job loss, medical bills, car repairs, or any financial emergency. Without it, a single unexpected cost can force you into high-interest debt. With one, you can weather almost any financial setback without derailing your savings or investment plan.
The standard recommendation is 3β6 months of essential living expenses. "Essential" means: rent or mortgage, food, utilities, minimum debt payments, insurance, and transportation. Non-essentials like entertainment and dining out don't count. The Emergency Fund mode in this calculator lets you enter each expense category separately to get a precise personalised target.
Where to keep your emergency fund matters: a high-yield savings account is ideal. It earns 4%+ APY (vs 0.39% average), is fully FDIC-insured, and remains completely liquid β you can transfer money out in 1β3 business days when you need it. Do not keep your emergency fund in investments or CDs, which can lose value or lock your money during exactly the moment you need it.
Three months is the absolute minimum β suitable for dual-income households with stable jobs. Six months is the standard recommendation for most people. Nine to twelve months is appropriate for freelancers, self-employed workers, people in volatile industries, or anyone with dependents.
Keep your emergency fund in a separate high-yield savings account from your regular spending β this prevents accidental spending and earns the best available rate. See our HYSA Calculator to compare today's top rates and see exactly what your emergency fund would earn each year.
Set a fixed monthly auto-transfer to your emergency fund account. The Emergency Fund mode tells you the exact monthly amount needed and how many months it will take. Automate it β treating it like a bill means it happens consistently without relying on willpower.
APY vs Interest Rate β What's the Difference?
Banks advertise two numbers: the interest rate (also called the nominal rate) and the Annual Percentage Yield (APY). They sound similar but are meaningfully different β and APY is the number that actually matters.
The interest rate is the base rate the bank pays on your balance per year. APY accounts for how often that interest is compounded. If a bank pays 4.00% interest compounded daily, the APY is actually slightly higher because you earn interest on your interest throughout the year. The APY represents your true annual return, including all compounding effects.
Always compare accounts using APY β not the interest rate. An account advertising "4.00% interest, compounded monthly" will earn you less than one advertising "4.00% APY" even though the number looks the same. By law, US banks are required to disclose APY in advertising, making it easier to compare apples to apples.
Daily compounding (common at online banks) produces the best APY for a given base rate. Annual compounding produces the lowest. The difference on typical savings amounts is small but meaningful over time.
$10,000 at 4.00% interest over 5 years: Annual compounding β $12,166.53. Daily compounding β $12,213.82. That $47 difference grows significantly with larger balances and longer time periods. Always choose daily compounding when available.
APY = (1 + r/n)n β 1, where r is the nominal rate and n is compounding periods per year. For daily compounding at 4.00% base rate: APY = (1 + 0.04/365)365 β 1 = 4.0808%. This is the true annual yield.
7 Rules for Saving More
Set up automatic transfers on payday before you can spend the money. Pay yourself first. Automated saving requires zero willpower and is the single most effective savings habit proven by behavioral economics research.
If you're earning 0.39% at a traditional bank, switching to a HYSA earning 4.20% takes 10 minutes online. On $10,000, that's $420/year vs $39 β for exactly the same effort.
Saving "in general" is far less effective than saving for a named goal. Use the Goal Planner mode to give every dollar a destination β a vacation fund, a down payment, a new car. Named goals in separate accounts get funded faster and touched less.
Your savings rate is monthly savings divided by monthly take-home income. A 20% savings rate is the standard target. A 50% savings rate enables early financial independence. Small increases β even 1% more per month β compound dramatically over time.
When the Fed is expected to cut rates, locking in a high-yield CD protects your return. Our CD Calculator models single CDs and ladder strategies so you can see exactly how much you'd earn with full rate protection.
Before withdrawing from savings, run the Withdrawal Impact mode. The true cost of a $5,000 withdrawal from an account earning 4.20% over 10 years isn't $5,000 β it's closer to $7,400, including the compounding interest you lose.
Once your emergency fund is fully built, savings accounts are not the best vehicle for long-term growth. Savings beats inflation today (4.20% vs 3%), but investing in diversified equities historically returns ~10%. Use our Investment Calculator to model the difference.
Compare Every Type of Savings Account
Ready to find the right account for your goals? Use our dedicated calculators to model high-yield savings accounts, money market accounts, and CDs with today's exact rates β then compare how each fits into your overall savings and investment strategy.
Once your savings goals are funded, put the excess to work. Our Investment Calculator shows how a diversified portfolio grows vs a savings account over 10, 20, or 30 years β the difference is striking.