Deal has now ended, view more bank account bonuses by clicking here.
Update 2/11/21: Offer has expired early.
(Update 2/1/21: Just a quick note: I enrolled when the offer came out with the plans on funding before 2/12/21, then realized that you only get 10 days from enrollment to fund, so be sure to only enroll when you are ready. I was not able to re-enroll by clicking through the link again, but using the enrollment link received via email, I was able to re-enroll, and I got an email indicating my enrollment is good and have 10 days from today to fund.)
Offer at a glance
- Max Bonus Amount: $100
- Direct Deposit Required:Â No
- Additional Requirements: $10,000 deposit (new funds)
- Hard/Soft Pull:Â Soft pull
- Credit Card Funding: None
- Monthly Fees: None
- Availability: Nationwide, new or existing users
- Expiration Date: enroll by February 12, 2021 and fund within 10 days
- Insured:Â FDIC
The Offer
- New or existing Marcus by Goldman Sachs customers can enroll to be eligible for $100 bonus when depositing $10,000 in new funds within 10 days of enrollment and maintaining those funds plus your current balance for 90 days. You must enroll first.
The Fine Print
- Offer valid from 1/15/21 to 2/12/21. To qualify for the $100 Savings Bonus, you must first enroll in this offer at http://www.marcus.com/us/en/savings/osa-savingsbonus-1 or by calling Marcus at 1-855-730-SAVE (1-855-730-7283) by 11:59 PM EST on 2/12/21. Upon successful enrollment you will receive a confirmation of your enrollment via email or U.S. mail.
- After enrollment, you must deposit $10,000 or more in new funds (internal transfers won’t count) into your Marcus Online Savings Account within 10 days of enrollment and maintain at least $10,000 of those new funds in that account in addtion to the account to the account balance at the time of enrollment for 90 consecutive days from the date of reaching the required dollar amount. Multiple deposits are allowed to reach the required dollar amount and can be made by joint owners for a joint account.
- Offer available to new and existing customers. Each customer is limited to one bonus offer, which can only be applied to a single account. For eligibility purposes, each joint owner will be treated as a separate customer. For example, if you apply the bonus offer to a joint account, the remaining joint owner(s) may apply this offer to another account they own if they have not done so already.
- The bonus will be deposited into your account within 14 days after fulfilling the above requirements. To receive your bonus, your account must be open and in good standing at the time the bonus is deposited in your account. The bonus will be treated as interest for tax reporting purposes.
- We reserve the right to modify or revoke this offer at any time without notice. If we determine that you have engaged in or plan to engage in abuse or gaming in connection with this offer, you will not be eligible for this offer.
Our Verdict
Marcus offered a similar deal in March 2019, then in January 2020, and now in January 2021; they also offered a $500 deal in July 2019. It’s worth holding a Marcus account as the bonuses all seem to be for new or existing customers.
Locking up $10,000 for 90 days and getting $100 is a APY of roughly 4%, added to their regular .50% interest rate (see Best Savings Rates) for a total 4.50% return. Pretty nice offer, especially if you already have a Marcus account open. I plan on doing this one.
You can always get an extra .10% APY from Marcus if you are an AARP member, and new Marcus members can sign up with a referral link and get an extra .20% APY for 3 months which stacks nicely with the $100 bonus (both deals can stack for a bonus .30%). Do not leave your referral link in the comments below, you can find and leave links in this dedicated post.
Hat tip to reader YK3
Live now: https://www.marcus.com/us/en/savings/osa-savingsbonus?icid=2022cash_banner
Get $100 when you deposit $10,000 or more in new funds into a new or existing Online Savings Account.
Must deposit within 10 calendar days of enrollment, and maintain at least $10,000 of those new funds, plus your existing balance as of 12 am ET on the day you enrolled, in your account for 90 consecutive days. Enroll by 2/16/22.
Chuck
Posted, thanks https://www.doctorofcredit.com/marcus-100-bonus-for-new-existing-savings-customers-with-10000-deposit/
In my account today: Special offer: $100 Cash Bonus
Deposit $10,000 in new funds to an Online Savings Account. Enroll by 2/16/22. Balance requirements and terms apply.
When I click learn more, no page found. Hoping it means it’s about to rolled out.
Ditto
Same here, an error
The linked page is https://www.marcus.com/us/en/savings/osa-savingsbonus?icid=2022cash_banner_ams
I found out today that if your Marcus account is less than $1 for 60 days it goes into a dormant status so make sure to always keep at least $1 in the account.
Are you getting an alert when a withdrawal initiated externally is posted to your account?
Mine is not disabled under My Account > Profile > Deposits transaction alerts.
But I have never gotten anything (going back years) when, say, I initiate a withdrawal from Fidelity or Citi/Chase/Amex does an autopay withdrawal.
It seems useless to get an alert only when I myself initiate a transaction on Marcus.
I accidently took out $50 due to autopay from credit card and they won’t give me the $100, no exceptions
It’s 114 days since money deposited. No bonus. Will call tomorrow.
Do they have inactivity fees/closure of account? Thinking about keeping $1 instead of closing it.
Viv No fees. I think many of us are keeping $1.
2/12: Deposited 10k
5/12: Bonus completed
5/14: $100 posted
DP: Funds deposited 2/12, bonus posted 5/14. Bonus + normal interest makes this about a 4.4% return in 3 months. Not amazing, but better than HM Bradley & Porte 3% so not a bad deal either.
grumble, grumble, grumble: P1 paid out same day as “maintain eligibility thru date,” and P2, who is 10 days behind, did not get paid out and the Marcus app is not showing the checkmark next to the “thru date,” which was yesterday. I had too high of expectations based on P1 experience, I guess.