Make sense of saving money.
A plain-English guide to savings accounts — what they are, the main types, how interest quietly grows your money over time, and how your deposits are protected. Written to explain, not to sell.
What this guide covers
What is a savings account?
A safe home for money you don't need to spend right away — that can earn a little while it waits.
A savings account is an account held at a bank, building society or credit union that is designed to hold money you want to set aside rather than spend day to day. In return for keeping your money there, the institution typically pays you interest — a small percentage of your balance, added regularly.
Three things make a savings account different from a current (checking) account: it is meant for money you are not actively spending, it usually pays more interest, and it may place some limits on how often or how quickly you can take the money out. Together, those features make it a sensible place for an emergency fund or for money you are saving toward a goal.
Keep money safe
Money sits with a regulated institution rather than as cash — and, with an authorised provider, is usually covered by a deposit protection scheme.
Earn interest
The provider pays a percentage on your balance. Left untouched, that interest can itself earn interest over time.
Separate from spending
Keeping savings apart from everyday money makes it easier to leave them alone — and to watch a goal grow.
The main types of savings account
Most accounts are a trade-off between how freely you can access your money and how much interest you earn. Here are the common shapes.
Easy-access
Withdraw whenever you like. The most flexible option, usually at the cost of a lower, variable interest rate.
Notice account
You give a set notice period (say 30 or 90 days) before withdrawing. A middle ground — a little more interest for a little less freedom.
Fixed-term
You agree to leave money untouched for a fixed period (e.g. one to five years) in exchange for a fixed, usually higher, rate. Also called a fixed-rate bond or CD.
Regular saver
Designed for putting a set amount away each month. Often offers an attractive rate, with limits on how much you can deposit.
Tax-free accounts
Many countries offer accounts where interest is sheltered from tax (such as an ISA in the UK). Rules and allowances vary by country.
High-yield / online
Often run by online-only providers, offering stronger rates than a typical branch account. Check the provider is properly authorised and protected.
How interest works
Interest is the heart of saving. Understanding the difference between simple and compound interest is the single most useful idea here.
Simple vs. compound
Simple interest is paid only on your original amount. Compound interest is paid on your original amount and on the interest already earned — so your money grows a little faster each period. Over years, that difference adds up.
You'll often see the rate quoted as AER (Annual Equivalent Rate) or APY (Annual Percentage Yield). Both express the yearly rate including the effect of compounding, which makes accounts easier to compare fairly.
An illustration
Imagine setting aside £1,000 at a 4% annual rate, with interest compounding once a year and nothing withdrawn:
| After | Simple interest | Compound |
|---|---|---|
| 1 year | £1,040 | £1,040 |
| 5 years | £1,200 | £1,217 |
| 10 years | £1,400 | £1,480 |
Illustrative only. Real rates vary, can change over time, and are never guaranteed. Figures rounded.
How your money is protected
One of the biggest reasons savings accounts feel safe: in most countries, deposits at authorised institutions are backed by a government-established protection scheme.
Deposit protection, in plain terms
A deposit protection scheme promises that if an authorised bank, building society or credit union fails, eligible savers are compensated up to a set limit — so your money is safe even if the institution is not. Schemes are funded by the industry, not by you, and coverage is usually automatic.
The single most important rule: protection only applies to providers that are genuinely authorised and part of the scheme. Always confirm a provider is properly regulated before trusting it with your money, and remember the limit usually applies per person, per institution — spreading large balances across institutions can keep more of it covered.
Saving and inflation
Protected savings won't fall in pounds or dollars — but their buying power still depends on inflation.
Nominal vs. real returns
Your nominal return is the interest rate you see. Your real return is that rate minus inflation — what your money is actually worth in spending terms. If a savings account pays 3% while prices rise 4%, your balance grows on paper but buys slightly less than before.
Why it still makes sense
Even so, savings play an essential role: they keep an emergency fund secure and instantly available, protect money you'll need soon, and remove the risk that comes with putting short-term money anywhere volatile. The goal is to use savings for what they are good at — not to expect them to do everything.
How to choose a savings account
A short checklist worth running through before you open or move an account.
Confirm the provider is properly regulated and covered by a deposit protection scheme before anything else.
Use the AER or APY to compare rates fairly, since it accounts for compounding. Watch for short-lived bonus rates.
Decide how soon you might need the money. Don't lock funds away that you may need at short notice.
A fixed rate gives certainty; a variable rate can rise or fall. Choose what suits your plans and outlook.
Note minimum balances, withdrawal limits, notice periods and any fees that could eat into your return.
Keep balances within the protected limit per institution, spreading larger sums if needed.
Building a saving habit
The mechanics matter less than the habit. A few simple principles do most of the work.
Start with a buffer
Many people aim to build an emergency fund covering a few months of essentials, kept somewhere easy to access.
Pay yourself first
Setting aside an amount as soon as money comes in — before spending — tends to work far better than saving whatever is left.
Automate & review
A standing transfer makes saving effortless. Reviewing the rate now and then keeps your money working as hard as it can.
Key terms, explained
The words you'll meet most often around savings.
- AER / APY
- The annual rate including the effect of compounding — useful for comparing accounts fairly.
- Compound interest
- Interest paid on your balance and on interest already earned, so growth accelerates over time.
- Easy-access
- An account allowing withdrawals at any time, usually with a variable rate.
- Fixed-term / bond / CD
- An account paying a fixed rate in return for leaving money untouched for an agreed period.
- Variable rate
- An interest rate that the provider can change over time, up or down.
- Deposit protection
- A government-established scheme compensating savers up to a limit if an authorised provider fails.
- Notice period
- The advance warning some accounts require before you can withdraw.
- Real return
- Your interest rate after accounting for inflation — what your money is truly worth.
Frequently asked questions
Straight answers to what people ask most about saving.
What is a savings account?
Is my money safe in a savings account?
What do AER and APY mean?
Easy-access or fixed — which is better?
Can I lose money in a savings account?
Will my interest rate change?
Understand it, then make it yours.
Saving works best when it's simple and understood: a safe, protected home for money you don't need right now, quietly earning interest while you get on with life. Know how the account works, check it's properly protected, and let time and consistency do the rest.
This page is an educational resource about savings accounts in general. It is for information only and is not financial, investment, legal or tax advice, not a recommendation, and not an offer of any account or product. Interest rates shown are illustrative, vary between providers, can change over time and are never guaranteed. Deposit protection schemes, limits and eligibility differ by country and apply only to authorised institutions — always check the scheme and rules that apply to you, and confirm any provider is properly regulated before depositing money.
ELLINGTON TRADE LTD is a registered International Business Company (IBC) with the St. Vincent and the Grenadines Financial Services Authority (SVGFSA) under IBC number 12785. Ellington Ltd is headquartered in Ottawa, Canada at 275 Slater St. #900, ON K1P 5H9. This website is an educational resource and does not offer deposit-taking or banking services. Last updated: 2 June 2026.
