Imagine finding out your business loses more than $1,250 every year. Not because of rising costs, bad investments, or poor sales, but simply because of where you keep your cash.
For many small businesses and startups, that’s exactly what’s happening. Operating cash sits in traditional business checking accounts earning little to no interest while inflation quietly erodes its value and missed returns add up month after month.
The irony? Most business owners think they’re making the conservative choice by sticking with a large, traditional bank. In reality, they’re paying what’s called an “inertia tax,” which is the hidden cost of doing nothing.
If your business regularly keeps six figures in operating cash, your checking account shouldn’t just hold your money. It should be contributing to your bottom line.
The Hidden Cost of Doing Nothing
Most business owners carefully evaluate every recurring expense. They compare software subscriptions, negotiate vendor contracts, and look for ways to improve margins. Yet one of the largest financial decisions they make often goes unquestioned: where they keep their operating cash.
Leaving your business funds in a traditional checking account that earns 0.01% APY or less may feel like the “safe” option because it’s familiar. But familiarity comes with a cost.
Think of it as an inertia tax: the hidden price of leaving your cash exactly where it’s always been. Unlike most business expenses, this one doesn’t show up on your profit and loss statement. Instead, it quietly appears as income your business never earns.
And while the amount may seem small month to month, over the course of a year, those missed earnings can add up to thousands of dollars that could have been reinvested into your business.
Why Traditional Banks Don’t Pay More
Have you ever wondered why so many traditional business checking accounts still offer 0.01% APY—or nothing at all?
The answer isn’t that they can’t pay more. It’s that their business model is different.
Traditional banks maintain thousands of physical branches, large corporate offices, legacy technology systems, and the overhead required to keep them all running. Those costs don’t disappear. They’re built into the way the bank operates.
Digital-first banks like Grasshopper have a different advantage. Without the expense of maintaining brick-and-mortar branches, they can invest more back into their customers through competitive interest rates, modern digital tools, and lower fees.
In other words, your money isn’t paying for marble floors and empty teller lines. It’s staying where it belongs: working for your business.
The $1,262 Difference
To understand how much this difference really matters, it helps to look at how modern business checking accounts are structured.
Many digital-first accounts use tiered APY rates, meaning different portions of your balance earn different interest rates. This allows businesses to earn more on their operating cash without needing to move funds into separate savings products.
Now, let’s look at a simple example.
Imagine your business maintains an average daily operating balance of $100,000 throughout the year. With a high-yield business checking account:
- The first $24,999.99 earns 1.00% APY
- The next $75,000 earns 1.35% APY
That results in approximately $1,262 in interest over one year.
Now compare that to a traditional business checking account earning 0.01% APY:
- $100,000 at 0.01% earns just $10 per year