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BrioDirect High-Yield Savings Account: Earn Expired

5.30% APY
+71 Deal Score
125,978 Views
Update: This popular deal is still available.

BrioDirect is offering 5.30% APY with their High-Yield Savings account. No monthly fee.

Thanks to staff member EfficientGame645 for finding this deal.

Details:
  • No monthly maintenance fee.
  • $5,000 minimum to open.
  • $25 minimum to earn APY
  • Keep track of your savings with online and mobile banking
  • Provided by Webster Bank, N.A. ("Webster Bank"), an insured FDIC institution.
*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of 9/17/2024. Rate is subject to certain terms and conditions. You must deposit at least $5,000 to open your account and maintain $25 to earn the disclosed APY. Rate and APY may change at any time. Fees may reduce earnings.


Slickdeals may be compensated by BrioDirect

Original Post

Written by
Edited September 23, 2024 at 02:20 PM by
BrioDirect is offering 5.30% APY with their High-Yield Savings account. No monthly fee.

Details:
  • No monthly maintenance fee.
  • $5,000 minimum to open.
  • $25 minimum to earn APY
  • Keep track of your savings with online and mobile banking
  • Provided by Webster Bank, N.A. ("Webster Bank"), an insured FDIC institution.
The APY dropped 0.05% on 6/4/24, 5.35% --> 5.30%

*Annual Percentage Yield (APY) is accurate as of 6/4/2024. Rate is subject to certain terms and conditions. You must deposit at least $5,000 to open your account and maintain $25 to earn the disclosed APY. Rate and APY may change at any time. Fees may reduce earnings.

Slickdeals may be compensated by BrioDirect
Created 05-02-2024 at 12:12 PM by EfficientGame645
in Finance BrioDirect Banking - Bank Advertiser
If you purchase something through a post on our site, Slickdeals may get a small share of the sale.
Deal
Score
+71
125,978 Views
5.30% APY
These responses are not provided or commissioned by the bank advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by the bank advertiser. It is not the bank advertiser's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered. Opinions expressed here are the author's alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airline or hotel chain, and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.

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Featured Comments

be aware that they have a weekly withdrawal limit.
If you need to withdraw all your money at once you can not
I haven't used them personally, but a coworker of mine has and he said they're solid. Not just the rate, but ease of use, mobile app, customer service etc. was great. Wealthfront looks like a solid option as well, but it's technically not a HYSA. At least not in the traditional sense since it has checking account features built into it as well.
BrioDirect is an online brand of Webster Bank (FDIC insured), which has been around for almost 90 years and has 177 branch stores across the country (in case that's a benefit to you). Wealthfront is online only and not technically a bank. They distribute your money to banks that are FDIC insured, so you're covered that way.

I think both are good options, so it comes down to your personal preferences. I would opt for the higher rate if there's no major differentiator between the two products (and your money is insured), but that's just me. Some people prefer to go with a known brand they trust and will sacrifice interest in return. American Express Savings, for example, are popular despite only offering 4.25%.

You can see a listof other popular option over on our personal finance site at https://money.slickdeals.net/best-savings-accounts/
My only complaint with them is how they handle beneficiaries.

You have to send them a "special" message formatted just the way they want it. They don't have an online form or a PDF to make it easier.

On top of that, I can't get them to acknowledge in a formal way that my beneficiaries have been properly assigned.

I don't think it's too much to ask that they send me either a message, or an email, or god forbid a USPS letter showing me the beneficiary info they have on file.

They just want you to take their word for it. As anyone who's dealt with an estate after a person has died will tell you, it's pretty important that you get these details done, and done correctly.

As far as they're concerned, I have to wait till I'm dead to find out they did it incorrectly.

I'm thinking seriously of walking away from them because of this.


Rant over.

.

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Joined Sep 2014
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junkpromo
05-22-2024 at 06:12 AM.
05-22-2024 at 06:12 AM.
Quote from AmusedScent305 :
I think you're thinking of I-bonds for the $10k limit. I'm fairly certain you can buy up to $10,000,000 in T-bills and other marketable securities.

Is this it?
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/ma...ury-bills/
Reply
Joined Jan 2020
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AmusedScent305
05-22-2024 at 06:34 AM.
05-22-2024 at 06:34 AM.
Quote from junkpromo :
Is this it?
https://www.treasurydirect.gov/ma...ury-bills/

Yes, that's the correct page for info on T-Bills. If you go up one level, you'll be able to find pages for the rest of the marketable securities here:

https://www.treasurydirect.gov/ma...ecurities/

If you're buying through a Treasury Direct account, it's pretty simple. Link a bank account to TD account, go to Buy Direct tab, select type of security to buy, select the auction date and duration of security you want to buy, put in the amount to buy (minimum $100) and select whether to reinvest and for how long and whether to deliver the earnings at maturity back to your TD account or your bank account and click confirm.

Keep in mind you buy T-Bills at a discount. So if you buy a $100 T-bill with a 52-week duration, you'll see $95 come out of your bank today and a year from now they will deposit $100 (the face value) into your account.

I haven't bought any through a brokerage, so I'm not 100% sure how state/local tax works in that scenario, so you might lose some earnings that way. You should consider purchasing through a tax advantaged account like an IRA if you aren't buying straight from Treasury Direct.
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Last edited by AmusedScent305 May 22, 2024 at 06:38 AM.
Joined Mar 2016
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Jacky16
05-22-2024 at 07:15 AM.
05-22-2024 at 07:15 AM.
Quote from junkpromo :
What's the limit that you can buy? Tbill is only $10,000 per person
You can buy "unlimited" (might have cap but we might never reach it) from those brokers.
I usually use Fidelity
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Joined Sep 2014
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junkpromo
05-22-2024 at 08:02 AM.
05-22-2024 at 08:02 AM.
Quote from AmusedScent305 :
Yes, that's the correct page for info on T-Bills. If you go up one level, you'll be able to find pages for the rest of the marketable securities here:

https://www.treasurydirect.gov/ma...ecurities/

If you're buying through a Treasury Direct account, it's pretty simple. Link a bank account to TD account, go to Buy Direct tab, select type of security to buy, select the auction date and duration of security you want to buy, put in the amount to buy (minimum $100) and select whether to reinvest and for how long and whether to deliver the earnings at maturity back to your TD account or your bank account and click confirm.

Keep in mind you buy T-Bills at a discount. So if you buy a $100 T-bill with a 52-week duration, you'll see $95 come out of your bank today and a year from now they will deposit $100 (the face value) into your account.

I haven't bought any through a brokerage, so I'm not 100% sure how state/local tax works in that scenario, so you might lose some earnings that way. You should consider purchasing through a tax advantaged account like an IRA if you aren't buying straight from Treasury Direct.

Someone said T-bills are not exempt from STATE and LOCAL tax, so your profit is less, so that brings to my next question : Would you buy T-bills or CDs with a current rate of 5.4% or so? Anyone can chime in.
Reply
Joined Oct 2011
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blackmarlin8
05-22-2024 at 08:07 AM.

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank blackmarlin8

05-22-2024 at 08:07 AM.
Quote from publicpersona :
If you already have a brokerage account somewhere, or even if you don't, consider just using a federal money market fund. VMFXX at Vanguard, for example, has a compounded yield of 5.27 now, and similar at Fidelity and Schwab. Some of the earnings may be tax-free in your state as well.

Federal money market funds are not FDIC insured but are invested in government instruments that are arguably just a secure if not more secure than FDIC.
Just fund brokerage account and get $USFR, they pay 5.35% dividend paid monthly , money stays safe and liquid.
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Joined Jan 2020
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AmusedScent305
05-22-2024 at 10:40 AM.
05-22-2024 at 10:40 AM.
Quote from junkpromo :
Someone said T-bills are not exempt from STATE and LOCAL tax, so your profit is less, so that brings to my next question : Would you buy T-bills or CDs with a current rate of 5.4% or so? Anyone can chime in.

No, T-Bills ARE exempt from state and local tax. That may change if you buy through a brokerage account though, depending on your state. I don't want to derail this thread further since we've strayed into T-Bills vs. CDs on a deal about an HYSA, though, so I think that the Finance forums here would be a better resource for your questions. That said, for the same APY over the same term, assuming a conventional CD that doesn't let you bump rates or add to it or call it without penalty, the T-Bill is a better deal IMO.
Reply
Joined Sep 2014
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junkpromo
05-22-2024 at 10:50 AM.
05-22-2024 at 10:50 AM.
Quote from AmusedScent305 :
No, T-Bills ARE exempt from state and local tax. That may change if you buy through a brokerage account though, depending on your state. I don't want to derail this thread further since we've strayed into T-Bills vs. CDs on a deal about an HYSA, though, so I think that the Finance forums here would be a better resource for your questions. That said, for the same APY over the same term, assuming a conventional CD that doesn't let you bump rates or add to it or call it without penalty, the T-Bill is a better deal IMO.

Thank you for the information, Financial Master!
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Joined Apr 2017
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publicpersona
05-22-2024 at 12:25 PM.
05-22-2024 at 12:25 PM.
Quote from blackmarlin8 :
Just fund brokerage account and get $USFR, they pay 5.35% dividend paid monthly , money stays safe and liquid.
That's an OK alternative, but don't see how that's any better than VMFXX or similar at other brokerage houses. The thing I like about VMFXX at Vanguard is that it can be set as the settlement account. So if you want to add or remove money, it's just one transfer in or out, with no waiting for an order to be settled.
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Diz
05-22-2024 at 01:15 PM.

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Diz

05-22-2024 at 01:15 PM.
Quote from publicpersona :
That's an OK alternative, but don't see how that's any better than VMFXX or similar at other brokerage houses. The thing I like about VMFXX at Vanguard is that it can be set as the settlement account. So if you want to add or remove money, it's just one transfer in or out, with no waiting for an order to be settled.
SPAXX is coming to Fidelity as a core account investment option on June 15. Vanguard is gearing even further away from the individual investor with negative changes effective July 31 (I'm fairly certain that's the date). I can't get my money out of Vanguard quick enough (100% transfer to Fidelity is in-process), and with T+1 as the impending industry standard settlement date coming up in less than a week, that aspect should not be a dealbreaker.

USFR's performance has also been surpassing that of VMFXX for multiple months in a row now. It may only be by about 0.1%, but when you're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars in an investment, it's significant, not to mention the compounding effect. I track a bunch of Money Market Funds & Treasury Bill ETFs weekly, at the least. I was enjoying my run with VMFXX and VUSXX for about a year until I learned about ETFs like SGOV and most recently, USFR.
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Last edited by Diz May 22, 2024 at 01:18 PM.
Joined Apr 2017
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publicpersona
05-23-2024 at 05:40 AM.
05-23-2024 at 05:40 AM.
Quote from Diz :
SPAXX is coming to Fidelity as a core account investment option on June 15. Vanguard is gearing even further away from the individual investor with negative changes effective July 31 (I'm fairly certain that's the date). I can't get my money out of Vanguard quick enough (100% transfer to Fidelity is in-process), and with T+1 as the impending industry standard settlement date coming up in less than a week, that aspect should not be a dealbreaker.

USFR's performance has also been surpassing that of VMFXX for multiple months in a row now. It may only be by about 0.1%, but when you're talking hundreds of thousands of dollars in an investment, it's significant, not to mention the compounding effect. I track a bunch of Money Market Funds & Treasury Bill ETFs weekly, at the least. I was enjoying my run with VMFXX and VUSXX for about a year until I learned about ETFs like SGOV and most recently, USFR.
I'm not disagreeing with anything you've said, except that I'm not seeing a significant different in return.Whether YTD or SEC 7-day yield, VMFXX has the edge. I'm sure you could find different points to measure to show the opposite.

SPAXX YTD 1.96% 7-Day 4.96%

VMFXX YTD 2.08% 7-day 5.27%
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AmusedScent305
05-23-2024 at 07:34 AM.
05-23-2024 at 07:34 AM.
Quote from publicpersona :
I'm not disagreeing with anything you've said, except that I'm not seeing a significant different in return.Whether YTD or SEC 7-day yield, VMFXX has the edge. I'm sure you could find different points to measure to show the opposite.

SPAXX YTD 1.96% 7-Day 4.96%

VMFXX YTD 2.08% 7-day 5.27%

Think they were talking about USFR vs VMFXX. In which case, when I looked them up on Morningstar yesterday, the yields were showing 5.30% and 5.27% with expense ratios of 0.15% and 0.11% respectively.

That said, even with the changes Vanguard is making, I think if you're happy with them, the biggest reason to jump ship would be to secure a bonus like the one RobinHood offers (3%) or to try to "send a message" (which, good luck with that as a single investor with less than $100 million invested). Most, if not all of the new fees they're introducing are avoidable or wouldn't apply to your average person:

https://youtu.be/QLBZoqTtQZ4?si=fH-R41VHQCixQQXF

For people who open accounts like this Brio one to follow higher interest rates, what is the threshold where it is "worth" the hassle of switching to you? Assuming, of course, that you're moving far less than the FDIC limit of $250k.
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Joined Jan 2008
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Diz
05-23-2024 at 08:13 AM.
05-23-2024 at 08:13 AM.
Quote from AmusedScent305 :
Think they were talking about USFR vs VMFXX. In which case, when I looked them up on Morningstar yesterday, the yields were showing 5.30% and 5.27% with expense ratios of 0.15% and 0.11% respectively.

That said, even with the changes Vanguard is making, I think if you're happy with them, the biggest reason to jump ship would be to secure a bonus like the one RobinHood offers (3%) or to try to "send a message" (which, good luck with that as a single investor with less than $100 million invested). Most, if not all of the new fees they're introducing are avoidable or wouldn't apply to your average person:

https://youtu.be/QLBZoqTtQZ4?si=fH-R41VHQCixQQXF

For people who open accounts like this Brio one to follow higher interest rates, what is the threshold where it is "worth" the hassle of switching to you? Assuming, of course, that you're moving far less than the FDIC limit of $250k.
Correct, I was referring to the yields of USFR vs. VMFXX. I have found this tool to be the most accurate, but I also cross-reference the actual respective companies' "performance" metrics as well:

https://portfolioslab.com/tools/s...USFR/VMFXX

I won't keep money in SPAXX in Fidelity. I was just pointing out that the main limitation for why I never considered using Fidelity as my main checking account is because a fund such as SPAXX wasn't available for the core (at least for me). My funds will be in USFR, and if I need additional funds for an unforeseen reason, I will sell some, wait the T+1 for settlement, convert to SPAXX, and use the Fidelity Cash Management Account debit card or ACHs to withdrawal. I'm actually not sure yet if auto-deductions from USFR are possible if I don't have funds in SPAXX because I'm still mid-process of finalizing this set-up. But I also don't intend on needing to do this because I also have an HYSA with CFG Bank that's been at 5.25% for a long while and I've enjoyed my relationship with them. I understand some HYSAs have paid slightly better, but given the no state/local taxes aspect with USFR in the Fidelity CMA, I've transitioned 95% of my monthly expenditure cash into USFR.

I don't have a particular threshold. I've been consolidating all kinds of accounts throughout the past year and Vanguard just very recently put me over the edge to leave when it came to buy USFR through them (transferring out of VMFXX), I could only procure through their mobile app (not on desktop), the settlement date was 3x that of what it was with Fidelity, and I could only buy whole shares. I've also had much less enjoyable interactions with them over the phone and via messaging.

I opened this Vanguard Roth IRA 23 yrs ago when I was just getting started and it was time for me to move on. I'm not detracting from VMFXX...I just wanted to mention another option that I personally have found to work better for me (USFR), and why I think it does.
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Last edited by Diz May 23, 2024 at 08:20 AM.
Joined Apr 2017
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publicpersona
05-23-2024 at 09:13 AM.
05-23-2024 at 09:13 AM.
Quote from Diz :
Correct, I was referring to the yields of USFR vs. VMFXX.
You certainly were clear on that. I just read something that wasn't there. My apologies.

You make good points about Vanguard that I need to look into.
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Joined Jun 2012
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dougnet
05-23-2024 at 01:03 PM.
05-23-2024 at 01:03 PM.
Quote from hbasavar :
MyBankingDirect.com [mybankingdirect.com] at 5.55% APY
and
poppybank.com [poppy.bank] at 5.5% APY

Both are FDIC insured and don't have to jump through hoops to get that rate.
Poppybank is shady AF, read reviews before banking with them
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Joined Jan 2008
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Diz
05-23-2024 at 01:45 PM.
05-23-2024 at 01:45 PM.
Quote from publicpersona :
You certainly were clear on that. I just read something that wasn't there. My apologies.

You make good points about Vanguard that I need to look into.
I forgot to mention the mandatory account closure fee that Vanguard will be implementing as well -- I think it'll be $100. And that'll be assessed even if you withdraw everything, just leave $1.00 (or $0.00) in the account, and then close it down the road for housekeeping purposes. Talk about a nice kick in the nuts on the way out. It's an easy decision for me to leave them.

Fortunately, many of their competitors will reimburse the ACAT fee if your transfer is large enough, so if you do decide to exit Vanguard, I would *not* recommend going the route above (leaving a minimal amount there) and instead, take advantage of a transfer offer that some have advertised and move it all, or talking to an advisor at your new brokerage once completed for the reimbursement.

I toyed around in RobbingHood after the market tanked shortly post the initial COVID outbreak and will never give them any business again after the crap they pulled with the meme stocks. I didn't get stuck in that mess, but talk about screwing over your customers.
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