Best Savings Account Interest Rates in the Philippines (2026)

Okay so I went down a rabbit hole last week and now I have a spreadsheet with more tabs than I expected.
Bank rates, maintaining balances, transfer fees, hidden charges, perks that sound amazing until you read the fine print. I built it because I was genuinely confused — every article I found either had outdated numbers or was clearly written by someone who had never actually tried to open a digital bank account on a slow LTE connection.
Here’s the thing I didn’t expect to find: the difference between a 0.10% savings account and a 6.00% one on ₱100,000 is almost ₱6,000 a year. Which sounds great until you learn that most bank interest gets hit with a 20% Final Tax before it even reaches you. That “6% rate” from your digital bank? It’s actually 4.8% in your pocket.
And then there’s Pag-IBIG MP2, which most of us ignored because it sounds like something our parents nagged us about — but it’s the only one where the dividends are completely tax-free. That 7% actually stays 7%.
So I kept going. Several tabs later, here’s what I found.
Digital Bank Savings Accounts
Digital banks have completely changed the baseline expectation for savings interest in the Philippines. While traditional banks still offer rates that hover embarrassingly close to zero, the digital players have been competing aggressively — and savers are the ones winning. Here’s where things stand as of early 2026. All rates are per annum, and all these institutions are PDIC-insured up to ₱500,000 per depositor.
| Bank | Interest Rate (p.a.) | Min. Balance | Conditions | PDIC Insured |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maya Bank | Up to 6.00% | ₱0 | Base rate 3.50%; 6.00% with Maya Savings goals feature active | Yes |
| GoTyme Bank | ~3.50% | ₱0 | Standard savings rate; no lock-in required | Yes |
| Tonik Bank | 4% -4.5% | ₱0 | Solo or Group Stash savings | Yes |
| UNO Digital Bank | ~3% – 3.5% | ₱0 | Savings account rate varies by tier | Yes |
| Overseas Filipino Bank (OFBank) | Up to 2.50% | ₱0 | Government-backed digital bank under DBP | Yes |
| Seabank | ~4.00% | ₱0 | Tiered rate depending on balance | Yes |
Table: Digital Bank Savings Accounts
Rates subject to change* without prior notice. Verify current rates directly with each bank before opening an account. PDIC insured up to ₱500,000 per depositor per bank.
The gap between digital banks and traditional banks here is not subtle — it’s a chasm. Most of these accounts require zero maintaining balance, which means your entire deposit is earning from day one. If you have idle cash sitting in a passbook account somewhere earning 0.10%, this table is the reason to move it.
Time Deposits: Digital Banks
If you have money you genuinely won’t touch for a fixed period — three months, six months, a year — time deposits lock in a rate and remove the temptation to spend it. Digital banks have made this easier by letting you open TDs entirely in-app, often with lower minimums than traditional banks. The trade-off is you lose access to the funds until maturity (or pay a penalty for early withdrawal).
| Bank | Term | Interest Rate (p.a.) | Min. Deposit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tonik Bank | 6 months | Up to 6.50% | ₱5,000 | Time Deposit product via app |
| Maya Bank | 3–12 months | Up to ~6% | ₱1,000 | Maya Time Deposit; rate varies by term |
| Union Digital Bank | 6-12 months | ~4%-5% | ₱5,000 | Rates vary by deposit size |
| UNO Digital Bank | 3–12 months | ~5%-6% | ₱5,000 | Promotional rates vary |
| CIMB Bank | 6–12 months | ~4%-5% | ₱5,000 | Rates depend on campaign |
Table: Time Deposits Digital Banks
Rates subject to change*. Early withdrawal may result in forfeiture of interest. PDIC insured** up to ₱500,000 per depositor per bank.
The sweet spot for most people is the 6-month term — long enough to earn meaningfully, short enough that you’re not completely locked out of your money during emergencies. If you have a specific goal with a timeline (tuition, a trip, a down payment), matching the TD term to that goal is the most painless way to save.
Time Deposits: Traditional Banks
Traditional banks — your BDOs, your BPIs, your Metrobanks — still dominate in terms of branch access, loan products, and payroll integration. Their time deposit rates, however, have not kept pace with digital banks. They’re still worth listing because some people need the branch network, and because rates on longer-term placements can occasionally be negotiated if you’re placing larger amounts.
| Bank | Term | Interest Rate (p.a.) | Min. Deposit | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BDO Unibank | 30 days–5 years | 0.75%–3.50% | ₱10,000 | Rate varies significantly by term and amount |
| BPI | 30 days–5 years | 0.75%–3.25% | ₱10,000 | Higher rates for longer terms and larger placements |
| Metrobank | 30 days–5 years | 0.75%–3.50% | ₱10,000 | Promotional rates available; inquire at branch |
| Security Bank | 30 days–1 year | 1.00%–3.75% | ₱10,000 | Rates competitive for mid-term placements |
| UnionBank | 30 days–1 year | 1.00%–3.50% | ₱10,000 | Online TD available via app |
| Landbank | 30 days–5 years | 1.00%–4.00% | ₱5,000 | Government bank; rates may differ by branch |
Table: Time Deposits Traditional Banks
Rates subject to change*. Confirm current rates with your branch or the bank’s official website. PDIC insured** up to ₱500,000 per depositor per bank.
The honest read: if you’re purely optimizing for interest, traditional bank TDs don’t compete with digital banks at equivalent terms. Where they make sense is for very large placements (where you’ve negotiated a special rate), for people who want face-to-face service, or for placements that exceed the ₱500,000 PDIC ceiling and need to be spread across multiple institutions you already trust.
Government Savings Programs
These are the ones people forget about, which is a sayang because some of them are genuinely excellent — especially for specific life situations. Government-backed programs carry sovereign guarantee rather than PDIC insurance**, which for many people feels more secure, though the practical difference for amounts under ₱500,000 is minimal.
| Program | Offered By | Rate / Return | Min. Investment | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pag-IBIG MP2 (Modified Pag-IBIG 2) | HDMF | ~7.03% dividend (2023 declared rate) | ₱500/month or lump sum | 5-year voluntary savings; tax-free dividends |
| SSS PESO Fund | SSS | ~4%-5% historical range | Varies | Optional retirement savings |
| Retail Treasury Bonds (RTBs) | Bureau of the Treasury | Varies per issuance (recent RTBs ~5.50%–6.50%) | ₱5,000 | Fixed-rate government bonds |
| OFBank Savings | DBP / OFBank | Up to 2.50% p.a. | ₱0 | Government digital bank; PDIC insured |
| Landbank iSave | Landbank | Up to 2.00% p.a. | ₱0 | Digital savings via Landbank app |
Table: Government Savings Programs
Dividend rates* for Pag-IBIG MP2 are declared annually and are not guaranteed. RTB rates are fixed at issuance. All programs subject to their respective terms and conditions.
Pag-IBIG MP2 deserves a special mention: it has consistently declared dividends above 6% for several years running, it’s tax-free, and the minimum contribution is low enough that almost anyone can participate. The catch is the 5-year term and the fact that it’s a dividend — not a guaranteed rate — so it can theoretically go lower. In practice, it rarely has.
Here’s what I actually do, since you asked (you didn’t, but I’ll tell you anyway): most of my liquid savings sit in a digital bank earning somewhere between 5% and 6%. A smaller portion goes into Pag-IBIG monthly, automatically, and I don’t think about it. There’s a time deposit I opened eight months ago that I’ve genuinely forgotten the maturity date of — the spreadsheet knows, presumably.
The spreadsheet strategy works not because it’s clever but because it removes decisions from the equation. I made the decisions once, set up the transfers, and now the money moves without me. The rates I chose were good enough at the time. I check in maybe twice a year to see if something dramatically better has emerged.
Nothing dramatically better has emerged. That’s fine.
What I’d tell anyone starting out: open one digital bank account this week, fund it with whatever you have sitting in your ATM account, and let it sit. Don’t wait until you’ve compared every single option — the opportunity cost of waiting is real, and the difference between the third-best and first-best option is usually smaller than the cost of doing nothing for another three months.
The best rate is the one you actually put money into. The spreadsheet is just there to remind you that you did.
All rates in this article are based on publicly available information as of March 2026 and are subject to change without notice. PDIC insured** up to ₱500,000 per depositor per bank. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Verify current rates with each institution before making any financial decisions.
*Important: Interest rates shown may be promotional, conditional, or capped. Actual earnings depend on balance limits, missions, and bank terms. Always check the official bank app or website before depositing.
**All BSP-licensed banks in the Philippines are covered by PDIC insurance up to ₱500,000 per depositor per bank.
A BantayDaily personal essay by Juno dela Cruz. Last updated: March 2026.