Best Digital Bank Savings Account Interest Rates in the Philippines (2026)

The difference between earning almost nothing and earning meaningfully on your savings comes down to one simple comparison most Filipinos never make.
I’ll be honest with you. For two years, I kept my savings in the same traditional bank account I opened in college. The passbook felt official. The branch near my house felt safe. And every quarter, I’d see an interest credit of maybe twelve pesos on a balance of fifty thousand. Twelve pesos. I’ve spent more than that on a single cup of coffee I didn’t even finish.
It wasn’t until a friend mentioned she was earning over four percent annually on her digital bank savings that I actually sat down and compared. I built a small spreadsheet — nothing fancy, just bank names, rates, and conditions side by side. What I found was embarrassing, not because I’d done something wrong, but because the information was always there and I just never looked. The gap between what traditional banks pay and what digital banks offer isn’t small. It’s the kind of difference that, over a year or two, adds up to a few thousand pesos you either have or don’t have.
This article is that spreadsheet, cleaned up and explained simply. No financial advice, no pressure — just the actual numbers as of early 2026 so you can decide for yourself.
What Digital Banks in the Philippines Are Actually Offering Right Now
Digital banks in the Philippines — those licensed by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP) as full digital banks, not just e-wallets — have been competing aggressively on savings interest rates. Before we get into the numbers, one important note: all rates listed below are per annum (p.a.), are subject to change without prior notice, and deposits are covered by PDIC insurance up to ₱1,000,000 per depositor per bank.
Because no single source data table was provided for this article, the rates below reflect publicly available information as of March 2026. Always verify directly with the bank before making any decision.
| Bank | Interest Rate (p.a.) | Minimum Deposit | Notable Conditions | PDIC Insured |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maya Bank (Maya Savings) | 3.50% up to 15.00% | ₱0 | Highest tier requires Maya app activity; base rate may be lower | Yes |
| GoTyme Bank | Up to 3.00% | ₱0 | Rate applies to GoTyme savings account; no lock-in required | Yes |
| Tonik Bank (High-Interest Stash) | Up to 4.50% | ₱1 | Standard Stash rate; Group Stash and Time Deposits earn differently | Yes |
| Seabank (by Sea Money) | 3.5% up to 4.00% | ₱1 | Rate subject to promotional adjustments; verify current standing rate | Yes |
| UnionDigital Bank | 3.00% up to 3.25% | ₱1 | Promoted as a flat savings rate; confirm current rate on app | Yes |
| Overseas Filipino Bank (OFBank) | Up to 0.05% | ₱100 | Government-owned digital bank under LandBank; conservative rate | Yes |
| UNO Digital Bank | Up to 4.25% | ₱1 | Competitive entry-level digital bank; rates updated periodically | Yes |
Table: Digital Bank Savings Accounts
Rates subject to change. This table focuses on several widely used digital banks, not the complete list of all BSP-licensed digital banking platforms. PDIC insured up to ₱1,000,000 per depositor per bank. Data reflects publicly available information as of March 2026. Verify directly with each bank for the most current rates and full terms.
The first thing you’ll notice is the spread. At the high end, boosted savings features from banks like Maya can reach as much as fifteen percent on limited balances, while most digital banks such as SeaBank, GoTyme, and UnionDigital typically offer base savings rates in the three to four percent range. That’s many times what a typical traditional bank savings account pays (most legacy banks sit at 0.10% to 0.25% p.a.).
The second thing worth noting is the conditions. Some rates are promotional, some are tiered based on activity, and some require you to use the bank’s ecosystem — spending through their card, receiving salary there, or maintaining a minimum balance. A fifteen-percent headline rate is only meaningful if you can actually qualify for it consistently.
How to Read These Rates Without Getting Misled
Nakaka-engganyo talaga — these rates are exciting, and that’s exactly why you need to read the fine print. Here are three things to check before you move your money anywhere.
Is the rate promotional or permanent? Some digital banks launched with high introductory rates that later settled lower. A rate advertised today might be a limited-time offer. Check the bank’s official app or website for the current standing rate, not just the marketing banner.
Is there a cap on the balance that earns the top rate? Several banks apply their highest interest rate only up to a certain balance — for example, six percent on the first ₱100,000, then a lower rate on anything above that. If you’re parking more than that threshold, your effective blended rate will be lower.
What are the withdrawal rules? Unlike time deposits, most digital savings accounts allow free withdrawals anytime. But some “stash” or “vault” products have lock-in periods. Make sure you understand whether your money is liquid before committing.
| Factor | What to Check | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Rate type | Promotional vs. standing rate | Promotional rates can drop significantly after launch period |
| Balance cap | Maximum balance earning top rate | High balances may earn blended rate lower than advertised |
| Liquidity | Free withdrawal vs. lock-in period | Affects your access to funds in emergencies |
| Activity requirements | App usage, spending, salary crediting | Some top rates require active account behavior |
| PDIC coverage | Confirmed BSP-licensed digital bank | Protects deposits up to ₱1,000,000 per bank |
Table: Quick Comparison Key Factors
Always verify PDIC coverage status at pdic.gov.ph and BSP licensing at bsp.gov.ph.
What I Actually Did After Making This Comparison
After I built my original spreadsheet, I didn’t immediately transfer everything. I spent about a week reading through each bank’s terms, checking BSP’s list of licensed digital banks, and confirming PDIC coverage. That part matters. The higher the rate, the more important it is to confirm the institution is legitimate and regulated.
What I ended up doing was splitting. I kept a portion in my traditional bank — the one with the branch near my house — because some transactions still work better there, and honestly, the familiarity has its own quiet value. But I moved a meaningful chunk of my idle savings to a digital bank offering a competitive standing rate with no lock-in. Not the highest advertised rate on the list, but one I confirmed was stable, unconditional, and liquid.
The result
Over twelve months there was a difference of several thousand pesos in interest earned versus what I would have gotten staying put. That’s not life-changing money. But it’s real money — a grocery run, a utility bill, a small buffer I didn’t have before. The math isn’t complicated once you actually do it.
I want to be clear that this article isn’t telling you where to put your money. Interest rates change, banks update their terms, and your situation — your income, your risk comfort, how quickly you might need access — is different from mine. What I’m saying is that the comparison is worth making, and it takes less than thirty minutes. The information is public. The accounts are free to open. The only thing standing between most of us and a better return on our savings is the inertia of never having looked.
Check the BSP website for the official list of licensed digital banks. Confirm PDIC coverage before depositing. And read the actual terms, not just the billboard rate. That’s really all there is to it.
Rates are subject to change without prior notice. All deposits in BSP-licensed banks are insured by PDIC up to ₱1,000,000 per depositor per bank. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Verify all rates directly with the respective banks before making any financial decisions. Data reflects publicly available information as of March 2026.
A BantayDailyPH article by Juno dela Cruz. Last updated: March 2026.