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The Federal Reserve and Your Money

Interest rates are now on the decline, but borrowing costs are still the highest in over a decade. Here's what it means for your wallet.

The latest on the Fed from Bankrate’s experts

“Borrowers should understand that ‘falling interest rates’ are not the same as ‘low interest rates.’ The urgency remains to pay down high-cost debt and utilize zero-percent or other low rate balance transfer offers to turbocharge credit card debt repayment.”

– Greg McBride, CFA

Fed cuts interest rates by quarter point but faces uncertainty following Trump’s election win

The Federal Reserve cut interest rates for the second consecutive meeting on Thursday but this time by a smaller quarter of a percentage point, as inflation continues cooling and a slowdown in the job market stabilizes.
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Recent interest rate trends

Every time the Federal Reserve adjusts interest rates, borrowing and savings rates move in lockstep. Compare Bankrate data to see how the latest Fed decision is impacting rates on key consumer products.

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About Bankrate
Greg McBride

Greg McBride, CFA Arrow Right Icon

Chief Financial Analyst

Sarah Foster

Sarah Foster Arrow Right Icon

Principal U.S. Economy Reporter

Mark Hamrick

Mark Hamrick Arrow Right Icon

Senior Economic Analyst

Latest articles

A cashier at a supermarket rings up a customer's items.
Low joblessness isn’t the only indicator of a healthy labor market.
Facade of the Marriner S. Eccles building of the United States Federal Reserve in Washington, D.C.
The complicated nature of the Fed’s job can perpetuate some wild claims.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks to journalists at a post-meeting news conference
Fed officials will have decide how much of a slowdown they want to see before calling it quits on rate hikes.
Federal Reserve Headquarters building
The Fed’s job is often to make the difficult choice between low unemployment or low inflation.
People walk past the New York Stock Exchange
Recessions bring discomfort at best — and financial pain at worst.
Jerome Powell Federal Reserve
Interest rates are trending higher. Here are a few reasons to be happy about it.
A woman shopping for a board game at Target
Cooling inflation isn’t the same as low inflation.
Now hiring sign in a shop window
Job growth is expected to be nearly 10 times slower this year than it was last year.
Federal Reserve Eccles Building illustration
The key benchmark has been as high as 20 percent — and as low as 0 percent.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing.
Rate cuts mark a new era for the Fed. Here’s what you should do as a consumer.
Jerome Powell, Chair of the Federal Reserve of the United States
Follow along as Bankrate’s experts break down the Fed’s next interest rate decision.
Illustration of a US Federal Reserve ink stamp
Every financial decision you make is impacted by the Federal Reserve.
Illustration of Fed Chair Jerome Powell
Some high-profile economists have called the Fed’s half-point call “a mistake.”
Design element with Jerome H. Powell chairman of the Board of Governors
Rate cuts are coming. Just don’t call this a low-rate environment just yet.
Jerome Powell speaking. A now hiring banner in the background.
Behind the slowing economy is a Fed determined to defeat red-hot inflation.
young man falling out of the sky along with various household items and cash
You might not feel better about inflation because prices are still up post-pandemic.
Easy mornings and working from home for this couple
Savings yields topping inflation could let you hold onto your purchasing power.
Senior couple sitting at the kitchen table looking at digital tablet and recalculating their expenses.
Consider a savings account with an APY above the inflation rate.
Federal Reserve Eccles Building illustration
The key benchmark has been as high as 20 percent — and as low as 0 percent.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a Senate Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing.
Rate cuts mark a new era for the Fed. Here’s what you should do as a consumer.
Women using digital tablet to check her finances at home office
For savers, here’s what to consider when the Fed raises interest rates.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks from a podium
The Federal Reserve announced that it’s lowering interest rates following its Nov. 6-7 meeting.
Illustration of Fed Chair Jerome Powell
Some high-profile economists have called the Fed’s half-point call “a mistake.”
Design element with Jerome H. Powell chairman of the Board of Governors
Rate cuts are coming. Just don’t call this a low-rate environment just yet.
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