Dashboard Blog
ES EN FR
← Back to blog
GENERAL 3 min min read

Best Savings Accounts in Japan 2026 — Are Rates Finally Rising?

Best savings accounts in Japan for 2026: PayPay Bank 0.40%, Rakuten 0.30%, JGB 1.55%. Background on why Japanese interest rates remain low and what the Bank of Japan’s normalization means for savers.

Japan's savings landscape is undergoing its first significant change in decades. After the Bank of Japan (BoJ) ended its negative interest rate policy in March 2024, savings rates have begun—albeit slowly—to rise. They remain far below Western rates, but the trend has finally shifted.

Best JPY Savings Rates in 2026

InstitutionProductRate (JPY)AccessMin.Guarantee
PayPay BankStep-Up Yen Savings0.40%Daily¥1DICJ (¥10M)
Rakuten BankOrdinary Savings0.30%Daily¥1DICJ (¥10M)
Japan Ministry of Finance3-Month Treasury Bill0.81%3 monthsGovernment-backed
Japan Ministry of Finance10-year JGB1.55%10 yearsGovernment-backed
Major Banks (MUFG, SMBC)Regular Savings0.02–0.10%Daily¥1DICJ (¥10M)

Rates verified in May 2026 in JPY. These rates are significantly lower than comparable USD/EUR/GBP accounts.

PayPay Bank — 0.40% (Market Leader)

PayPay Bank (backed by SoftBank and Yahoo Japan) offers the highest liquid savings rate among major digital banks in Japan at 0.40%. While modest by global standards, this is 4–20 times higher than what Japan's megabanks offer. No monthly fees, no minimum balance.

  • Rate: 0.40% ordinary savings (or higher on the Step-Up account for new customers)
  • DICJ protection up to ¥10 million per depositor
  • Integrated with the PayPay payment ecosystem
  • Full digital banking features: transfers, bill payment, investment access

Rakuten Bank — 0.30% with Investment Integration

Rakuten Bank offers 0.30% on ordinary savings — higher than megabanks — with the added benefit of integration with Rakuten Securities for seamless investing. The Rakuten ecosystem (points, cashback) adds value for heavy Rakuten users.

  • Rate: 0.30% annual
  • Special rate for accounts linked to Rakuten Securities
  • Automatic sweep to money market funds available
  • DICJ insured up to ¥10 million

Japanese Government Bonds (JGBs)

For longer-term savings, 10-year JGBs now yield 1.55% — a historically significant figure for Japan, where 10-year bonds were near 0% as recently as 2022. 3-month T-bills yield 0.81%.

Retail investors can buy Japanese Government Bonds directly through Japan Post Bank or through any major brokerage. The variable-rate retail JGB (変動10年) adjusts every 6 months with a floor of 0.05%.

Context: Why Japanese Rates Are So Low

Japan's savings rates remain far below those of its global peers because:

  1. History of deflation: Japan battled deflation for 30 years (1990s–2020s). Zero or negative interest rates were a deliberate policy tool.
  2. Government debt: Japan's national debt exceeds 250% of GDP. Higher rates would dramatically increase debt servicing costs.
  3. Gradual normalization: The BoJ is normalizing very carefully. The policy rate rose from -0.1% (2024) to +0.5% (2026).

Is It Worth Saving in JPY?

For Japanese residents, yes—even 0.30–0.40% beats holding cash, and interest rates are on an upward trend. For investors outside Japan, JPY savings at these rates are only attractive if you expect the yen to appreciate (which is possible given the yen’s undervaluation relative to PPP).

The smarter move for most international investors: keep liquid savings in higher-yielding currencies (EUR, GBP, USD, NOK) and hold JPY only if you have JPY expenses or want currency diversification.

Deposit Guarantee in Japan

The Deposit Insurance Corporation of Japan (DICJ) protects up to ¥10 million per depositor per bank in ordinary deposits. This is roughly €60,000 — slightly lower than the EU's €100,000 guarantee. All banks listed above are DICJ members.

APY Radar — weekly yield alerts

Receive an email when a product exceeds your target APY. No ads, no spam — just data.

APY ≥ %