Why Your Savings Are Leaking Money Despite High Rates
Your bank statement shows $50,000 earning 1.8% interest. Not bad, right?
Except you're actually losing money. While you earn 1.8%, inflation sits at 2.7%. Your balance grows on paper, but your purchasing power shrinks in reality.
Most Singaporeans don't realise this is happening. They see a percentage that looks decent and assume they're being responsible. Meanwhile, their money buys less every single month.
Inflation Doesn't Wait for You to Notice
Walk into any hawker centre and you'll feel it. Chicken rice that cost $3.50 now goes for $4. Your FairPrice bill creeps up even when you buy the same items.
Singapore's inflation averaged 2.7% throughout 2024. If your savings earned 1.8%, your real return is negative. The MAS expects 2025 inflation between 1.5% and 2.5%. Even at the lower end, most savings accounts won't keep up.
Your CPF Ordinary Account earns 2.5% guaranteed, locked away until you're 55. If that's beating your accessible savings, you're parking your emergency fund in the wrong place.
What That 0.7% Difference Actually Costs You
Let's say you've got $100,000 sitting in savings. Decent emergency fund, maybe cash for your future HDB, perhaps inheritance from your parents.
You park it in an account earning 1.8%. Someone else finds one paying 2.5%. Over three years:
Your account (1.8%): Earned $5,400
Their account (2.5%): Earned $7,500
The gap: $2,100
That's a week in Bali, a new iPhone 17 Pro, or a decent laptop. You didn't make a bad investment. You just left it somewhere that paid less.
Stretch that over ten years? You're looking at roughly $7,200 in missed earnings. Nearly 7% of your original sum evaporated because you stuck with "good enough."
What the Switched-On Savers Are Doing Differently
The people who've figured out the savings game aren't chasing rates across five different banks or day-trading crypto. They've just stopped accepting rates that lose to inflation.
First Principle
If the rate doesn't beat projected inflation, you're losing purchasing power. Anything below 2.5% is treading water at best.
Second Principle
Stop looking at interest rates in isolation. The best strategies reward your existing financial behaviour.
Making your salary work harder than just once a month
You already receive your salary monthly and spend on groceries, transport, eating out. Some banks offer better rates when you route these necessary transactions through them. Credit your salary, use their cards for regular spending, and you qualify for rates that beat inflation.
DBS Multiplier works this way. New accounts can get up to 2.5% p.a. on the first $100,000 (valid till 31 Dec 2025) when you:
- Maintain a daily balance of $100,000 in your Multiplier account
- Credit your salary via GIRO to any DBS/POSB account
- Transact in one category like credit card spend
- Transact in more categories (home loan, insurance, investments) and you can earn up to 4.1% p.a. Moreover, that’s the current no-promotional rate that everyone gets to enjoy!
[ms-inline-widget account_type="savings-account" category_slug="savings-account" locale="en" country_code="sg" channel="savings-account" product_slug="dbs-multiplier-account" ]
There's also up to $680 in cash rewards on the table:
- $300 cash reward: Credit your salary of at least $1,600/month (or $500/month for NSFs) for 3 consecutive months. Only for customers who are new to salary crediting or haven't credited their salary to DBS in the last 12 months.
- Up to $380 cash rewards: Sign up for the DBS yuu Card. New DBS/POSB Credit Cardmember get $300 cashback plus $80 Esso Fuel Discount Vouchers with promo code DBSYUU. Existing Credit Cardmembers get an $80 Esso voucher (no minimum spend, no promo code required).
[ms-inline-widget provider_slugs="dbs" category_slug="best-credit-cards" locale="en" country_code="sg" channel="credit-cards" product_slug="dbs-yuu-visa-card" ]
Switching banks for salary crediting is straightforward. Most employers process it by your next pay cycle.
The Rate-Chasing Trap That Wastes More Than It Saves
Some people think maximising returns means opening accounts at six different banks. Spend two hours monthly managing these accounts, and that's 24 hours each year. At $20 per hour, you're effectively paying $480 in time to chase maybe $150 in extra interest. Not exactly cost-efficient.
Suddenly that extra 0.15% in interest doesn't look quite so attractive when you factor in the mental energy devoted and actual hours spent managing it all.
Why putting everything in one good ecosystem makes more sense?
The smarter play? Find a bank that rewards the whole relationship, then consolidate your core banking needs there. When your credit card spend counts toward better savings rates, you're earning on both sides without extra work.
Here’s where the DBS yuu Card makes practical sense. You can enjoy up to 18% cash rebates on your daily spend on groceries, transport and food—things most people are already spending money on regularly.
With a minimum spend of $800 at 4 participating merchants per calendar month such as Cold Storage, Giant, Guardian, foodpanda, Gojek, SimplyGo and more, not only will you earn up to 18% cash rebates, you also enjoy higher interest rates on your savings in the DBS Multiplier account.
Every Month You Wait Costs You Actual Money
Your current setup probably made sense when you opened the account. Interest rates were different, inflation was lower, priorities were elsewhere. Things change. Banks adjust their rates, launch promotions, and reward new customers whilst existing ones stay comfortable. Someone sitting on $100,000 earning 1.8% when alternatives offer 2.5% is leaving roughly $58 on the table each month. Over six months, that's $350 you could have bought something you actually want.
The Bottom Line
You already worked hard enough as it is. It’s time you reap the benefits of your efforts. By doing your due diligence, you can find a bank that best fits your financial needs—consolidate your savings and daily spends to maximise interest rates and beat inflation.
Know someone sitting on cash earning less than inflation? Send them this. Sometimes pointing out what's actually happening with their money is the push they need to stop losing it quietly.
Subject to qualifying criteria. T&Cs apply. SGD Deposits are insured up to S$100K by SDIC.
Abovementioned promotions are subject to qualifying criteria. T&Cs apply. + Deposit Insurance Scheme disclaimers
This is a sponsored post. Any view, opinion or recommendation expressed in this post does not take into account the specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs of any particular person. You should seek advice from a financial adviser regarding the suitability of any investment product, taking into account your specific investment objectives, financial situation or particular needs.
This post was written in collaboration with DBS. While we are financially compensated by them, we nonetheless strive to maintain our editorial integrity and review products with the same objective lens. We are committed to providing the best information in order for you to make personal financial decisions with confidence.
About the author
Caleb Leong is passionate about travelling the world and getting involved in cross-cultural works. Freelance digital marketing and content writing is a way for him to express himself creatively while earning his keep. He unwinds by diving into a variety of music genres. Living in a digitally disrupted world, he’d like to offer a different perspective on finances to show people the possibilities of what goes beyond a typical “Singaporean life”.
Why Your Savings Account Is Quietly Losing Money (Even When Interest Rates Are 'High') was first published on the blog.
makes it easy to take control of your finances. Stay in the loop—follow us on Instagram, Telegram, and Facebook for the latest on personal finance.