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SlickdealsForumsDeal TalkCapital One 360 Performance Savings Account: Earn Up to 1K Bonus Funds w/ 3.5% APY Deposit 10K-100K+ (New Capital 360 Accounts)
Capital One 360 Performance Savings Account: Earn Up to 1K Bonus Funds w/ 3.5% APY
Expired
Deposit 10K-100K+
(New Capital 360 Accounts)
+73Deal Score
174,940 Views
Capital One is offering their Capital One 360 Performance Savings Account: Earn Up to $1,000 Bonus Funds w/ 3.5% APY w/ deposits ranging from $10,000 to $100,000 of external funds (within the 15-day Initial Funding Period Only) when you open a new account and fund the account and apply promo code SPRING23 to receive this promotional bonus offer or when you follow the instructions listed below
Thanks to community member henry333 for finding this deal
Note, offer valid for New Capital One 360 Performance Saving Account only. If you have or had an open 360 Performance Savings, 360 Savings, 360 Money Market, Savings Now or Confidence Savings account as a primary/secondary account holder with Capital One on or after January 1, 2020, you will be ineligible for this bonus offer.
You're invited to earn an exclusive bonus and a high-yield savings rate: 3.50% APY. Act now.
Earn $100, $500 or $1,000 based on how much you deposit. Just open a 360 Performance Savings account, make a deposit within 15 days and hold your deposit for 90 days. Plus, you'll earn interest with one of the best savings rates in America.
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Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser.
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$10,000 gets you $100
$50,000 gets you $500
$100,000 gets you $1,000.
consider interest, after 90 days you got 1000+875, equivalent to 7.5% APY
From the fine print: If you have or had an open 360 Performance Savings, 360 Savings, 360 Money Market, Savings Now or Confidence Savings account as a primary or secondary account holder with Capital One on or after January 1, 2020, you will be ineligible for the bonus. If your account is in default, closed or suspended, or otherwise not in good standing, you will not receive the bonus.
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You only have to keep it end for 90 days. You will earn $875 just in interest during that time. With the extra $1,000 that would be $1,875 for 90 days which is equivalent to 7.5% return for the 90 days.
Jesus Christ 🤦 1,875 is 1.875% of 100,000. That is not a horrible return for 3 months for something like this but that's the theoretical worth at 3 months not the actual value, I'll explain.
The original 100,000 investment earns 3,500 per year, the bonus 1,000 earns 35 per year.
3,500+35+1,000 bonus = 4,535
4,535 is 4.535% of 100,000 or 377.91666 per month if kept for the year, which is pretty good.
APY is annual percentage yield. It has to be left in for a year to hit these figures. It has the compounded monthly interest baked into the APY, APR per month is not APY.
APY is the total gain with all compounded interest taken into account for a year. After 90 days you will not have 1,875. You will have 1,000 + whatever 3 months of the actual APR per month of your account balance is, without the majority of the compound interest for the year baked in and that will be a little bit less.
So to be clear, you have to let it compound for a year to hit the APY figure. APY includes the gains of compounding interest for a year.
APR for 3.5 APY is only 0.28709% monthly or 3.44 APR.
So you get a gain of 0.28709% of your account balance every month and that compounded monthly for a year works out to an APY of 3.5% and APR of 3.44508%
So it is very simple, you get 1,000 plus 0.28709% of your account balance every month.
Whether you get the bonus 1,000 immediately or after 3 months would affect the theoretical APY value a little bit, if you keep it all invested for the year.
So ya, you would only get 287.09 as interest for the first month from 100,000 or 289.9609 from 101,000 to hit an APY of 3.5%
I do because I've been frugal and saving for many decades. The problem is that while it may appear to be a handout, the bank is making money off of the money and in my case the government takes 37% of it back at tax time. No thanks. I prefer to change that dynamic and buy municipal bonds and/or bond funds. No minimums and I don't pay taxes on interest I receive that is used to fund public infrastructure. Yes, the money is arguably more locked-up but worth it for some of the interest that municipalities are having to pay to fund their projects...
"The saver finds his life, the gambler clings to it."
Got a Discover mailing with 3.5% APY and $150 (15k deposit) or $200 (25k deposit) bonus. It looks my banks and brokerage have interest rate <0.1 %. Googled some saving information and soon the Capital one app pop the deal posted here.
Someone hacked my discover account and stole money through zelle
They will advertise decent rates but only apply to new money; leaving existing customers at 0.8%. I withdrew most of my $ and moved it elsewhere that pays a better rate.
Jesus Christ 🤦 1,875 is 1.875% of 100,000. That is not a horrible return for 3 months for something like this but that's the theoretical worth at 3 months not the actual value, I'll explain.
The original 100,000 investment earns 3,500 per year, the bonus 1,000 earns 35 per year.
3,500+35+1,000 bonus = 4,535
4,535 is 4.535% of 100,000 or 377.91666 per month if kept for the year, which is pretty good.
APY is annual percentage yield. It has to be left in for a year to hit these figures. It has the compounded monthly interest baked into the APY, APR per month is not APY.
APY is the total gain with all compounded interest taken into account for a year. After 90 days you will not have 1,875. You will have 1,000 + whatever 3 months of the actual APR per month of your account balance is, without the majority of the compound interest for the year baked in and that will be a little bit less.
So to be clear, you have to let it compound for a year to hit the APY figure. APY includes the gains of compounding interest for a year.
APR for 3.5 APY is only 0.28709% monthly or 3.44 APR.
So you get a gain of 0.28709% of your account balance every month and that compounded monthly for a year works out to an APY of 3.5% and APR of 3.44508%
So it is very simple, you get 1,000 plus 0.28709% of your account balance every month.
Whether you get the bonus 1,000 immediately or after 3 months would affect the theoretical APY value a little bit, if you keep it all invested for the year.
So ya, you would only get 287.09 as interest for the first month from 100,000 or 289.9609 from 101,000 to hit an APY of 3.5%
Does that make sense?
ok dude you'll earn $863.74 of interest in the three months instead of $875, so the (simple, non-compound) interest is 3.464% instead of 3.510%. Both figures can be considered "3.5%"...
Im a Capital 360 customer already, so I wasn't eligible for the rewards and also keep under $10k in savings—
however did make me check my interest rate... I'd understood the .3% to be monthly, but it's not. They'd discontinued a savings program two-three years ago, and switched me. I was wrong that my interest rate was monthly, and was only getting $.3% annually! And had been getting that for 2-3 years which is pathetic. They'd sent me notes about the discontiuation and it'd be rolled into a new savings account—and I didnt fully read it seeing it was just rolling over into something like most do—and was just a name change, but it was a rate change.
So yeah, I've been earning about $20 a year, when it should have been around $250. So thanks for the post. I switched immediately to this new Performance Savings. Retroactively I've lost about $500 in interest because of the switch.
Im a Capital 360 customer already, so I wasn't eligible for the rewards and also keep under $10k in savings—
however did make me check my interest rate... I'd understood the .3% to be monthly, but it's not. They'd discontinued a savings program two-three years ago, and switched me. I was wrong that my interest rate was monthly, and was only getting $.3% annually! And had been getting that for 2-3 years which is pathetic. They'd sent me notes about the discontiuation and it'd be rolled into a new savings account—and I didnt fully read it seeing it was just rolling over into something like most do—and was just a name change, but it was a rate change.
So yeah, I've been earning about $20 a year, when it should have been around $250. So thanks for the post. I switched immediately to this new Performance Savings. Retroactively I've lost about $500 in interest because of the switch.
How did you switch?
Did you open a performance account, transfer money over, then does it allow you to close the old savings account online?The 2020 date is wrong. I've had mine since 2008 and couldn't sign up for the bonus.
I did this last Oct/Nov and got the bonus. Anyone know if this is one bonus per household OR if I my wife can open an account and get the bonus as well?
This is basically boosting your apy to 4.5 for the year. The only advantage here is you get the 1k after 90 days. So close the acct after 90 days and put into an account that's earning 4.8+ (somewhere else)
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$50,000 gets you $500
$100,000 gets you $1,000.
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Doesn't make them rich, either.
The original 100,000 investment earns 3,500 per year, the bonus 1,000 earns 35 per year.
3,500+35+1,000 bonus = 4,535
4,535 is 4.535% of 100,000 or 377.91666 per month if kept for the year, which is pretty good.
APY is annual percentage yield. It has to be left in for a year to hit these figures. It has the compounded monthly interest baked into the APY, APR per month is not APY.
APY is the total gain with all compounded interest taken into account for a year. After 90 days you will not have 1,875. You will have 1,000 + whatever 3 months of the actual APR per month of your account balance is, without the majority of the compound interest for the year baked in and that will be a little bit less.
So to be clear, you have to let it compound for a year to hit the APY figure. APY includes the gains of compounding interest for a year.
APR for 3.5 APY is only 0.28709% monthly or 3.44 APR.
So you get a gain of 0.28709% of your account balance every month and that compounded monthly for a year works out to an APY of 3.5% and APR of 3.44508%
So it is very simple, you get 1,000 plus 0.28709% of your account balance every month.
Whether you get the bonus 1,000 immediately or after 3 months would affect the theoretical APY value a little bit, if you keep it all invested for the year.
So ya, you would only get 287.09 as interest for the first month from 100,000 or 289.9609 from 101,000 to hit an APY of 3.5%
Does that make sense?
"The saver finds his life, the gambler clings to it."
Someone hacked my discover account and stole money through zelle
They don't have good security such as mfa
The original 100,000 investment earns 3,500 per year, the bonus 1,000 earns 35 per year.
3,500+35+1,000 bonus = 4,535
4,535 is 4.535% of 100,000 or 377.91666 per month if kept for the year, which is pretty good.
APY is annual percentage yield. It has to be left in for a year to hit these figures. It has the compounded monthly interest baked into the APY, APR per month is not APY.
APY is the total gain with all compounded interest taken into account for a year. After 90 days you will not have 1,875. You will have 1,000 + whatever 3 months of the actual APR per month of your account balance is, without the majority of the compound interest for the year baked in and that will be a little bit less.
So to be clear, you have to let it compound for a year to hit the APY figure. APY includes the gains of compounding interest for a year.
APR for 3.5 APY is only 0.28709% monthly or 3.44 APR.
So you get a gain of 0.28709% of your account balance every month and that compounded monthly for a year works out to an APY of 3.5% and APR of 3.44508%
So it is very simple, you get 1,000 plus 0.28709% of your account balance every month.
Whether you get the bonus 1,000 immediately or after 3 months would affect the theoretical APY value a little bit, if you keep it all invested for the year.
So ya, you would only get 287.09 as interest for the first month from 100,000 or 289.9609 from 101,000 to hit an APY of 3.5%
Does that make sense?
edit to amortize over 91 days
however did make me check my interest rate... I'd understood the .3% to be monthly, but it's not. They'd discontinued a savings program two-three years ago, and switched me. I was wrong that my interest rate was monthly, and was only getting $.3% annually! And had been getting that for 2-3 years which is pathetic. They'd sent me notes about the discontiuation and it'd be rolled into a new savings account—and I didnt fully read it seeing it was just rolling over into something like most do—and was just a name change, but it was a rate change.
So yeah, I've been earning about $20 a year, when it should have been around $250. So thanks for the post. I switched immediately to this new Performance Savings. Retroactively I've lost about $500 in interest because of the switch.
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however did make me check my interest rate... I'd understood the .3% to be monthly, but it's not. They'd discontinued a savings program two-three years ago, and switched me. I was wrong that my interest rate was monthly, and was only getting $.3% annually! And had been getting that for 2-3 years which is pathetic. They'd sent me notes about the discontiuation and it'd be rolled into a new savings account—and I didnt fully read it seeing it was just rolling over into something like most do—and was just a name change, but it was a rate change.
So yeah, I've been earning about $20 a year, when it should have been around $250. So thanks for the post. I switched immediately to this new Performance Savings. Retroactively I've lost about $500 in interest because of the switch.
Did you open a performance account, transfer money over, then does it allow you to close the old savings account online?The 2020 date is wrong. I've had mine since 2008 and couldn't sign up for the bonus.
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