AIB 7 day online (plus a suitable feeder account - current account or demand deposit) offers 5% on €10K. As mentioned above the Financial Best Buys lists have all the details of the best lump sum demand and term lump sum and regular saver deposit accounts. Just pick the ones that offer the best rate for splitting your lump sum up and open them.The Business Section of Friday's Irish Times is a good starting place.
These are the top three lump sum deposit accounts:
First Active eSavings - 5.22% up to 15k, 4.33% on all of it if it's more than this.
Halifax Flexi Saver - 5.15% up to 10k, then 4% after that.
Anglo Irish Bank 30 Day Demand - 4.5%
Eh? Where does the €14,998 figure come from? Yawn....Watch out for the FA account, the 5.22% is only applied to balances up to and including 15k. Go over this and it's 4.33%. There's been a lot of waffle on this site about where the dividing line actually is, ie is it 14,999 or 14,999.01 or 15,000.01 or yawn, but you can figure it out quite easily... keep it below 14998.
That is wrong/misleading info. Never been an AIB customer til the other day when I walked into the local branch and opened a demand deposit account (as the feeder account - I didn't want another current account) and registered for online banking which tool about 15 minutes. I will get the online banking stuff soon and then register for the online 7 day account offering 5% on €10K.
For the AIB one, I think you have to be an existing customer, or become a customer, or some red-tape, apparently. I haven't opened and don't intend to open, such an account so I can't advise. There's a long post on it around here.
Sorry - I misread your post as saying that there were problems opening the AIB account(s).Like I said, I think you have to become a customer.
In relation to NR mentioned above by a few posters bear in mind that HMG is guaranteeing all deposits and interest and these guarantees are much more extensive that those offered by, say, IFSRA/CB on Irish deposits! I stuck some money back in at the tail end of 2007 in order to avail of their 4.5% rate plus the 0.5% p.a. bonus for January and February 2008 (i.e. 5% on anything over €1K for the first two months of 2008).
Incidentally, the three that I mentioned are easily opened for non-customers (speaking from experience).
For the AIB one, I think you have to be an existing customer, or become a customer, or some red-tape, apparently. I haven't opened and don't intend to open, such an account so I can't advise. There's a long post on it around here.
So, you can save with First Active, Halifax or Anglo without becoming a customer
From my own experience, once you have a suitable account with AIB (easily done), opening the online notice-7 account is childs play.
Nope. To open one of these three accounts, you do not need to be an existing customer. You become a customer with this new account only.
However, with the AIB account in question, from what I've gathered from this site, you must be an existing customer. If you are not an existing customer, you must open some other account first (thereby becoming a customer), then you can open the AIB account in question. In fact, you may have to be a specific type of AIB customer? I thing I still have an SSA account with them from the 80ies but I don't think this would suffice.
But I may be wrong
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