When you come to the decision to open a deposit, the first question is often this: in manat, or in dollars or euros? Manat deposits usually offer a higher interest rate, while foreign currency deposits protect against exchange-rate changes. The right choice depends on your source of income, your goal, and your risk tolerance. In this article we compare the difference between the two options with real figures.
What is the main difference?
A manat deposit is held in the national currency and usually offers a higher annual interest rate. A foreign currency deposit (dollars, euros) comes with a lower interest rate, but if the value of the manat falls relative to the currency, your money gains more value in manat terms. That is, you are choosing between a high interest rate and exchange-rate protection.
How large is the interest gap?
At banks, the annual interest on manat deposits is usually noticeably higher than on foreign currency deposits. The example below shows a typical difference:
What does exchange-rate risk mean?
Suppose you have 10,000 manat. If you place it in manat at a high interest rate, your interest income is larger by year-end. But if the manat depreciates relative to the dollar over this period, the extra interest you earned in manat is "swallowed up" by the exchange-rate difference. With a foreign currency deposit, the interest is lower, but if the manat depreciates, your dollar equivalent automatically increases in manat terms. The risk works in both directions: if the manat strengthens, the foreign currency deposit loses out.
Who does a manat deposit suit?
- Those whose income and main expenses are in manat — the interest income is highest here.
- Those who will save money over the short to medium term and direct it toward a manat expense (renovation, a car, a wedding).
- Those who do not want to watch exchange-rate fluctuations and prefer stable, predictable income.
Who does a foreign currency deposit suit?
- Those saving currency for education, treatment, or travel abroad.
- Those who have part of their income in currency.
- Those who, in long-term saving, worry about exchange-rate changes and want to hold a stable currency value.
Diversification: combining both
No rule forces you to choose only one currency. Many people split their savings: they keep one part in a high-interest manat deposit and protect the other part in currency. This approach softens both risks — both a depreciation of the manat and the loss of gains relative to the currency. The split ratio should depend on which currency your expenses in the coming years will be in.
| Situation | More suitable choice |
|---|---|
| Income and expenses in manat | Mainly a manat deposit |
| Plan for a large expense abroad | Foreign currency deposit |
| Mixed income, long term | Split (diversification) |
| Short-term, specific manat expense | Manat deposit |
What to look at before opening a deposit?
Looking only at the interest rate is not enough. Pay attention to the deposit term (early withdrawal may reduce the interest), the interest payment schedule (monthly or at the end of the term), and the deposit's insurance conditions. Two deposits with the same interest rate can give a completely different result depending on these conditions.
Conclusion
A manat deposit gives more interest, while a foreign currency deposit gives exchange-rate stability; the "best" depends on the currency of your income and expenses. If you live in manat and spend in manat, a manat deposit usually makes sense; if you will have a large expense in currency in the future, protecting yourself in currency is more cost-effective. To optimize your daily expenses and payments, you can compare suitable bank products on our bank cards page.