Regular savings

robert 200

Registered User
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I cannot get a straight answer from E.B.S.

If I save 1000 € monthly in a regular savings account for 1 year

that lump sum of 12,200 € approx is transfered to another interest rate.

What is that current interest rate?

Thanks
 
Yeah, EBS are as clear as mud when it comes to declaring the interest rate that applies to the Family Saver account from month 13 onwards. I have raised this directly with EBS before.

The rate you are getting is the "EBS 1 Year Fixed Term Savings Account for rollovers". That is not the new business EBS 1 year fixed term deposit rate but rather the rate for existing roll-over business which is normally much lower.

In a nutshell, you are best off taking all money out of the EBS Family Saver account on the first anniversary. An instruction needs to be received by EBS before the first anniversary.

EBS make money off people who do not give an instruction to withdraw before the first anniversary when the headline rate ends.
 
The year 2 rate is not published. You will need to ask EBS.

The new business rate is 1.95% for a 1 year term with EBS. Hence, most likely, the rollover rate, is much lower than that.

Regardless, you are best off moving your money elsewhere.
 
It seems that Robert has had the product for 1 year as he is querying the year 2 rate. The rate one year ago, around this time, was 3.10%.

The average balance on an EBS Family Saver if you save 1,000 EUR per month and also make a 1,000 EUR initial deposit would be 6,500 EUR.

6,500*0.031 = 201.50 EUR gross. Perhaps, that is where the 200 EUR calc is coming from. Just a guess.
 
So is it fair to say that there is a significant difference between the interest rate

offered on a regular monthly saver account and the interest rate offered on the

rollover account after 12 months?
 
It seems that Robert has had the product for 1 year as he is querying the year 2 rate. The rate one year ago, around this time, was 3.10%.

The average balance on an EBS Family Saver if you save 1,000 EUR per month and also make a 1,000 EUR initial deposit would be 6,500 EUR.

6,500*0.031 = 201.50 EUR gross. Perhaps, that is where the 200 EUR calc is coming from. Just a guess.

Gotcha. From the OP and subsequent replies, I wasn't too sure.


So is it fair to say that there is a significant difference between the interest rate

offered on a regular monthly saver account and the interest rate offered on the

rollover account after 12 months?

Yes. All banks do that. They offer you a good fixed term rate but once that term is over, it rolls over into their ordinary deposit account. It is up to you to request for a specific term and the rate that goes with it again. The bank won't do it for you, that would only cost them money.


Steven
www.bluewaterfp.ie
 
So is it fair to say that there is a significant difference between the interest rate

offered on a regular monthly saver account and the interest rate offered on the

rollover account after 12 months?

Yes, the rate is much lower. Again, you are best off withdrawing your lump sum after 12 months and switching.
 
Yes. All banks do that. They offer you a good fixed term rate but once that term is over, it rolls over into their ordinary deposit account. It is up to you to request for a specific term and the rate that goes with it again. The bank won't do it for you, that would only cost them money.

Yeah, exactly you should give an instruction.

Banks go a variety of different things at maturity point if you don't give an instruction. Default instructions vary.
(1) Some banks move the money into a notice account at a low rate
(2) Some banks move the money into a special roll over instant access account at a low rate.
(3) Some banks move the money into their highest instant access rate.
(4) Some banks roll the money into a new term at the new business rate.
(5) Some banks roll the money into a new term at a lower roller over.

Generally, default instructions suck and you should always give an instruction. I think default instructions that give the bank the right to roll over a deposit into a new term without an instruction should be banned.
 
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