It's great to get interest
on your checking account balance, but the trade-off
can be awful. Interest-bearing checking accounts
at brick-and-mortar banks traditionally require
hefty minimum balances if you want to earn the
interest and an even higher balance if you want
to avoid a hefty monthly service fee. Pay just
one of those fees in a year and it probably will
wipe out the interest earned for that year, because
the rates on these accounts typically are minuscule.
Noninterest checking accounts are
the best bet for most people. They usually require
a low minimum deposit to open the account and
a low minimum balance to avoid monthly service
fees.
The average balance required to open an interest-bearing account and earn interest is $376.75. The average interest paid on these accounts is 0.24 percent, down from 0.32 percent a year ago. But if you'd like to avoid monthly fees, you'll need to maintain an average balance of $3,461.84, a stunning amount and an increase of approximately 4 percent over last year. If you maintain that balance, you're basically giving your bank a line of credit for that amount at your expense. That monthly fee, by the way, is $11.97, up from $11.72 last year.