• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

X Money launches

EviLore

Expansive Ellipses
Staff Member
$25 free by opting in (for premium X users). 6.00% APY, $10M aggregate FDIC insurance, metal debit card with cash back rewards and no foreign transaction fee.

Elon recreated PayPal all these years later. 6% APY is extremely good. As is free money without even needing to link an external account.
 
That 6% APY is very tempting. My cash account started at 5% and is at 3.35% now. Frustrating drops in rate like twice a year and never an increase.

Wonder if it's worth the hassle to move it to X money since it isn't clear how long the 6% will stick around.
 
Last edited:
I have paid grok but my x account is banned.

Am I fucked?

Grok says,
spongebob-patrick-star.gif
JK, I will ask her later. That said, I'm not joking. I wonder if people who can't get on X can still use X money.
 
Last edited:
A Twitter X account pays 6% interest? For conservative folks with lots of cash and no time for stock market gyrations, dump all your into this and make 6%/yr? In Canada, the best publicly posted rate I've seen from small banks is 4% but youre locked into a multiyear GIC.


X Money Features

X Money reads like a full‑blown checking‑account replacement. To see why, it helps to lay out the flagship perks clearly:

  • 6% APY on all cash deposited into X Money, with no stated limit
  • Up to $10 million in aggregate FDIC insurance via a multi‑bank sweep program
  • Unlimited 3% cash back on eligible card purchases, with standard category exclusions
  • Brushed metal Visa card usable anywhere Visa is accepted, plus Apple Pay support
  • All X creator payouts routed directly into X Money by default
  • Free domestic wires, bill payments, and mailed checks
  • Free ATM withdrawals, with reimbursement of out‑of‑network fees
  • Visa Zero Liability protection against unauthorized card transactions
  • Early direct deposit, with paychecks arriving up to two days before standard payday
  • Instant peer‑to‑peer payments to any handle on X
Taken together, those features make X Money look less like a digital wallet and more like a modern bank account.

With the X Money Visa card offering unlimited 3% cash back with carve‑outs for categories such as jewelry, precious metals and gambling, as well as zero foreign transaction fees, the card is competitive with mid‑tier premium credit products from issuers including Capital One Financial Corp. (NYSE:COF) despite operating as a debit‑style instrument.

The X Money 6% annual percentage yield with no published cap for cash deposits is far above the national average and even above many high‑yield savings products offered by traditional banks such as JPMorgan Chase & Co. (NYSE:JPM) or Bank of America Corp. (NYSE:BAC).

Standard deposits sit at a partner bank with FDIC coverage, while the X Cash Sweep Program automatically spreads larger balances across multiple FDIC‑insured institutions to reach the $10 million protection level for eligible Premium+ users.

For account holders conditioned to accept 0.5% yields and $250,000 in FDIC coverage, those numbers alone make the product look like a shot across the bow of both megabanks and fintech rivals such as SoFi Technologies Inc. (NASDAQ:SOFI) and Robinhood Markets Inc. (NASDAQ:HOOD).

Early direct deposit means paychecks can arrive up to two days early, while instant peer-to-peer payments make sending cash as natural as replying to a post.

Layer in Visa's Zero Liability protection and the FDIC backstop on deposits, and X Money begins to resemble a premium bank account more than a digital wallet — putting fresh pressure on incumbents including PayPal Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ:PYPL), Block Inc. (NYSE:XYZ), neobank Chime Financial Inc. (NASDAQ:CHYM) and even Wall Street's largest banks.
 
Insane rate, must be subsidized.
Absolutely, there's no way this is sustainable. But it makes sense if you're trying to get a rush of folks to jump onboard, it's certainly giving me some pause. Going to idle for a moment and see where it goes for now, competitors may adjust their own rates accordingly to not lose customers.
 
6%? Wowzers. Like others have said, I'm curious what the catch is. Wouldn't be surprised if the rate gets cut at some point after an initial user buy-in.

I'll stick with my own arrangements. I'm earning a much more modest 3.8% in my MM. My bank's rates regularly go up and down, but I know they're reliable (solid customer service actually). I also personally don't want to support Musk's endeavors.
 
I think he's using the IPO money to subsidise the APY, and he gets to sell your transation data.

It seems a little risky on both ends. Is the juice worth the squeeze? From what I can see, your money isn't FDIC insured until it gets placed in a partner's account. There's a lot that could potentially go wrong in between.
 
It seems a little risky on both ends. Is the juice worth the squeeze? From what I can see, your money isn't FDIC insured until it gets placed in a partner's account. There's a lot that could potentially go wrong in between.
I agree, that's why I would use it as a secondary or tertiary account. I got money parked that could be earning right now.
 
Last edited:
I wonder if he can skim from transaction fees to keep that 6%, or if he is pushing higher interest rate loans/credit lines and needs capital to work with.

My bank has had 0.1% interest on savings for YEARS, it's absolutely pathetic compared to the old days. Maybe if the fed stopped handing out interest free money then banks would start to care about savings accounts again.
 
I wonder if he can skim from transaction fees to keep that 6%, or if he is pushing higher interest rate loans/credit lines and needs capital to work with.

My bank has had 0.1% interest on savings for YEARS, it's absolutely pathetic compared to the old days. Maybe if the fed stopped handing out interest free money then banks would start to care about savings accounts again.
I was thinking the same. He's got some huge business loans and debt costing 8 or 10%. Acting like a bank and using people's money to benefit from the gap.

Ya, its crazy what savings accounts were. I remember my first one was I think 1986. My dad took me to BMO and put $100 in. I'm pretty sure it was 7-8% at this bottom tier. Then like every $5000 you got it'd jump and the top tier was something like 25 or 50k and it paid 12%.

Imagine if you had access to a 12% interest savings account now. Im not an economist, so I'm sure it'd be a shit show with everyone putting money in. Banks would go broke unless they can make it all back charging people mortgages and bank loans at 15%+.
 
The interest rate is almost certainly a loss leader to get people to sign up and will be systematically lowered overtime eventually winding up in line with the competition.
 
Top Bottom