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Home›Investing & Wealth›Building Wealth›Investing Basics

What Is APY?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
3 sources4 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • APY (Annual Percentage Yield) includes the effect of compound interest; APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is just the interest rate
  • A 5% APY on $10,000 earns $500 in year one, but $512.50 in year two (because year two's interest compounds on the original amount plus year one's interest)
  • Banks advertise APY on savings accounts and money market accounts; credit cards advertise APR on debt
  • The difference between APY and APR grows larger with more frequent compounding and higher interest rates
  • Comparing savings accounts by APY helps you identify which offers the best return on your deposits
On this page
  • APY vs. APR
  • How Compounding Works
  • Compounding Frequency Matters
  • APY in Banking
  • APY in Bonds
  • APY and the Time Value of Money
  • Comparing Investments with APY
  • APY and Inflation
  • The Power of Compounding

APY stands for Annual Percentage Yield, which is the total return on an investment or savings account in a year, accounting for the effect of compound interest.

APY vs. APR

APY and APR (Annual Percentage Rate) are often confused. They're related but different:

APR: The interest rate charged, without accounting for compounding

APY: The actual return earned, including the effect of compound interest

Example: A savings account offers 5% APR, compounded monthly.

Year 1 return:

  • $10,000 × 5% = $500 in interest
  • But interest compounds monthly, so the return is slightly higher: $512.68
  • APY = 5.127% (the actual return accounting for monthly compounding)

The difference seems small (5% vs. 5.127%), but compounds over years.

How Compounding Works

Compound interest is interest earning interest:

Year 1: You have $10,000 at 5% APR (5.127% APY)

  • Interest earned: $512.68
  • Balance at year end: $10,512.68

Year 2: Your new balance is $10,512.68

  • Interest at 5% APR: $525.63 (on the larger amount)
  • Balance at year end: $11,038.31

Notice: Year 2 interest ($525.63) is higher than Year 1 interest ($512.68), even though the rate is the same. This is compounding.

Over 30 years, $10,000 at 5% APY becomes $43,219. The compounding effect is powerful.

Compounding Frequency Matters

The more frequently interest compounds, the higher the effective APY:

5% APR compounded annually: APY = 5.00%

5% APR compounded semi-annually: APY = 5.06%

5% APR compounded quarterly: APY = 5.09%

5% APR compounded monthly: APY = 5.12%

5% APR compounded daily: APY = 5.13%

Difference between annual and daily compounding: 0.13%. On $100,000, that's $130/year. Over decades, it's significant.

APY in Banking

Banks must disclose the APY when advertising savings accounts or money market accounts. This helps consumers compare accounts fairly.

Example: Comparing savings accounts

Account A: 0.01% APY (typical bank in 2022)

  • $10,000 earns $1/year

Account B: 5.35% APY (high-yield savings account in 2024)

  • $10,000 earns $535/year

The 5.34 percentage point difference is massive. This is why shopping for high-yield savings accounts matters.

APY in Bonds

Bonds pay interest periodically. The APY helps compare different bond offerings:

Bond A: 4% coupon, annual payments → APY is roughly 4% (if you hold to maturity)

Bond B: 4% coupon, semi-annual payments → APY is roughly 4.04% (because you reinvest the semi-annual payment and earn interest on it)

Again, the difference seems small, but over 30-year bond terms, it compounds significantly.

APY and the Time Value of Money

APY reflects the time value of money: $1 today is worth more than $1 in the future because you can invest it and earn returns.

If you can earn 5% APY, then waiting one year for $1 is equivalent to having $0.95 today (if you had $0.95 today and invested it at 5%, you'd have $1 in a year).

This is the foundation for present value calculations and understanding how much money you need to retire.

Comparing Investments with APY

APY helps compare different investment returns:

High-yield savings account: 5% APY Intermediate-term bond: 4% APY Stock market (historical): 10% APY

The comparison is imperfect (stocks are riskier and returns are variable), but APY provides a common metric.

APY and Inflation

APY is the nominal return. The real return is APY minus inflation.

Example: Savings account earning 5% APY, inflation 3%

  • Nominal return: 5%
  • Real return: 2% (5% - 3%)
  • Your purchasing power increases 2% annually

If inflation were 5% and APY were 5%, your real return would be 0%—your money grows numerically but loses purchasing power.

This is why in low-inflation environments, low APYs are acceptable. In high-inflation environments, you need high APYs to maintain real return.

The Power of Compounding

Einstein allegedly called compound interest "the eighth wonder of the world." Here's why:

Scenario: $5,000/year invested for 40 years

At 5% APY: Total invested = $200,000 Ending balance: $659,000 Earnings from compounding: $459,000

Your money more than tripled because of compound interest. This is why starting retirement saving early is critical—time makes compound interest powerful.

Rule of 72: Divide 72 by the APY to estimate how long money takes to double.

  • At 5% APY: 72 ÷ 5 = 14.4 years to double
  • At 10% APY: 72 ÷ 10 = 7.2 years to double

Doubling every 7 years is why stock market investors often outpace savers. The extra 5% APY difference leads to dramatically different long-term outcomes.

◆ Sources

  1. APY Explained — Investopedia
  2. Bonds — Investor.gov
  3. FDIC Information
On this page
  • APY vs. APR
  • How Compounding Works
  • Compounding Frequency Matters
  • APY in Banking
  • APY in Bonds
  • APY and the Time Value of Money
  • Comparing Investments with APY
  • APY and Inflation
  • The Power of Compounding
◆ Related reading
  • What is an index fund?
  • What Is Risk Tolerance?
  • Strategic Philanthropy: Why Charitable Giving Is a Wealth Planning Essential
  • Should I pay off debt or invest?
All Investing Basics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

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