Guides/Best Savings Accounts Malaysia

Best Savings Accounts Malaysia 2026 — Highest Interest Rates Compared

A standard savings account at a Malaysian bank pays only 0.5%–1.5% per year. Digital banks and money market funds offer 3%–4.5% with similar safety. Here is how to choose the right account for your savings goals.

Savings · Accounts9 min read

Why Your Savings Account Rate Matters More Than You Think

On RM20,000 in savings, the difference between a 1% standard savings account and a 4% digital bank or money market account is RM600/year. Over 5 years with compounding, that difference grows to approximately RM3,400 in extra interest earned. This is not trivial — it is more than many Malaysians spend on a holiday or several months of groceries.

The principle is simple: always keep your savings in the highest-rate liquid account available, consistent with your safety requirements. "Set and forget" in a low-rate account is a passive wealth destroyer.

Best Options Compared (2026)

Account TypeRate (p.a.)LiquidityPIDM Protected
Standard bank savings (Maybank, CIMB)0.5%–1.5%InstantYes (up to RM250k)
Digital bank savings (GXBank, BigPay)3.0%–4.5%InstantYes (up to RM250k)
12-month Fixed Deposit (major banks)2.8%–3.9%After 12 monthsYes (up to RM250k)
Money market fund (Public Mutual, Maybank)3.5%–4.5%1–2 business daysNo (not capital guaranteed)
EPF Akaun Fleksibel (voluntary top-up)~6.3% (2024 dividend)Anytime (EPF 3rd account)Government-backed

Digital Bank Savings — The New Default for Malaysians

Since Malaysia's digital bank licences were awarded in 2022 and banks launched from 2024 onwards, high-yield digital savings have become accessible to all Malaysian adults with a smartphone and MyKad. Key players: GXBank (backed by Grab and Kuok group), BigPay (by AirAsia), and RHB NOVA (digital banking arm of RHB).

These accounts offer rates 2x–3x higher than traditional savings accounts, PIDM protection, and instant access via app. The practical limitation: no physical branches (not an issue for most digitally-literate Malaysians). Highly recommended as the primary savings account for your emergency fund and short-term savings goals.

Money Market Funds — Excellent for Medium-Term Savings

If you have RM10,000 or more in savings not needed for 3–12+ months, money market funds offer slightly higher returns than digital savings with 1–2 business day withdrawal. Accessible through your bank's investment platform (Maybank2u, CIMB Clicks) or third-party platforms (Fundsupermart, StashAway Simple). Minimum investments from RM100–RM1,000.

The key advantage of MMFs over FDs: no lock-in, so you can add or withdraw at any time. The disadvantage: not PIDM-guaranteed. In practice, Malaysian MMFs from reputable managers have never lost principal — but understand this is a fund investment, not a deposit guarantee.

How to Structure Your Savings

Immediate access (0–7 days): Keep 1 month of expenses in your digital bank savings or regular savings account — instant access, PIDM-protected. Emergency fund: Keep 2–5 months of expenses in a high-yield digital savings or money market fund. Medium-term goals (1–3 years): 12-month FDs or MMFs depending on rate and liquidity need. Long-term savings: EPF voluntary contributions, ASB, unit trusts.

For context on how fixed deposits compare to EPF, read Fixed Deposit vs EPF Malaysia. For emergency fund sizing, see How Much Emergency Fund Do I Need.

Disclaimer: This calculator and article are provided for educational and informational purposes only. Results are estimates and should not be considered financial, tax, legal, or investment advice. Please consult the relevant authority, financial institution, or qualified professional before making financial decisions.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the highest interest savings account in Malaysia?

As of 2026, digital bank savings accounts and money market funds offer the highest rates for liquid savings. GXBank Savings Account: approximately 3.0%–4.5% p.a. on balances with instant access (rates change periodically — check the app for current rate). BigPay Savings: approximately 3%–4% p.a. Money market funds: 3.5%–4.5% p.a. (Public Mutual Money Market, Maybank Cash Management). Traditional bank savings accounts (Maybank, CIMB, Public Bank standard) pay only 0.5%–1.5% — significantly lower. For locked savings, 12-month FDs at major banks pay 2.8%–3.9%.

Are digital bank savings accounts safe in Malaysia?

Yes. GXBank, BigPay, and other licensed digital banks in Malaysia are regulated by Bank Negara Malaysia (BNM) and covered by PIDM (Perbadanan Insurans Deposit Malaysia) protection up to RM250,000 per depositor per institution. This is the same protection offered by traditional banks. The key difference is that digital banks operate without physical branches — all operations are via app. Risk for digital banks: app/platform risk and operational resilience, though licensed digital banks must meet BNM's technology standards.

What is a money market fund and is it safe?

A money market fund (MMF) is a unit trust fund that invests in short-term, high-quality debt instruments — government bonds, bank deposits, and commercial paper. Malaysian MMFs managed by reputable institutions (Public Mutual, Maybank Asset Management, Principal, RHB Asset Management) have never recorded a loss in Malaysia's history. However, they are NOT capital-guaranteed — there is a theoretical risk of loss. In practice, MMFs are treated as near-cash equivalents by most financial planners. They are not PIDM protected (they are investment funds, not bank deposits).

Should I use a money market fund or fixed deposit for savings?

Money market funds typically yield 0.5%–1.5% more than standard 12-month FDs with better liquidity (1–2 day withdrawal vs 12-month lock-in for FD). The trade-off: FD is PIDM-insured (guaranteed), MMF is not (though essentially zero-risk historically). For amounts below RM250,000, a PIDM-insured MMF with high yield (offered through platforms like Fundsupermart or bank-linked MMFs) offers the best of both worlds. For larger amounts or institutional savers, FD's capital guarantee may be preferred for a portion of savings.

What is PIDM and how much does it protect?

PIDM (Perbadanan Insurans Deposit Malaysia) is Malaysia's deposit insurance corporation. It protects deposits in licensed Malaysian banks (conventional and Islamic) up to RM250,000 per depositor per member institution. Coverage applies separately for: conventional deposits (savings, current, FD) at one institution, Islamic deposits at the same institution, and joint accounts. So a married couple can each have RM250,000 protected at the same bank — RM500,000 total. Digital banks (GXBank, etc.) are PIDM members. Investment products (unit trusts, MMFs) are not PIDM-protected.

A

Written by

Alvin Chan Wun Long

Creator of SmartCalc MY · Software Engineer based in Malaysia

← Back to Guides