For the full APY comparison framework and account selection guide, see the High-Yield Savings hub.

Not all savings goals are created equal. Money you need in 6 months belongs in a completely different place than money you won’t touch for 10 years. Get this wrong and you either lose purchasing power (too conservative for long goals) or risk losing principal (too aggressive for short goals). This guide matches the right account and strategy to every timeline.

Quick Answer: Where to Put Your Money by Timeline

Timeline Best Vehicle Expected Return Risk Level Examples
0-3 months High-yield savings 4.00% APY None Emergency fund, upcoming bills
3-12 months High-yield savings 4.00% APY None Car repair fund, vacation, holiday gifts
1-2 years High-yield savings or no-penalty CD 4.00-4.25% None Wedding, moving costs, planned purchase
2-3 years CD ladder or Treasury bills 4.00-4.50% None Short-term house down payment
3-5 years CDs + conservative bond allocation 4.00-5.50% Low House down payment, car purchase
5-10 years 60/40 stock/bond portfolio 5.00-7.00% Moderate Start a business, second home
10-20 years 80/20 stock/bond portfolio 7.00-9.00% Moderate-High College fund, early retirement
20+ years 90/10 or 100% stock portfolio 8.00-10.00% High (short-term) Retirement, legacy wealth

The Risk-Timeline Rule

The shorter your timeline, the less risk you can take. Here’s why:

Timeline Worst 1-Year S&P 500 Return Could You Recover?
Need money in 1 year -37% (2008) No — you’d sell at the bottom
Need money in 3 years -37% followed by +26%, +15% Maybe — depends on timing
Need money in 5 years Most 5-year periods are positive Probably — history favors you
Need money in 10+ years Every 10-year rolling period since 1950 has been positive Yes — time heals volatility

Rule of thumb: Don’t put money in the stock market that you’ll need within 5 years.

0-3 Months: Emergency Fund and Immediate Needs

Strategy: 100% High-Yield Savings

This money must be instantly accessible with zero risk of loss.

Account APY Access Time FDIC Insured
Wealthfront Cash 4.25% Same day transfer ✅ ($8M via partner banks)
Marcus by Goldman Sachs 4.00% 1 business day ✅ ($250K)
Ally Savings 4.00% Same day (Ally checking) ✅ ($250K)
SoFi Savings 4.00% Instant (SoFi checking) ✅ ($250K)

How Much to Keep

Situation Emergency Fund Target
Single, stable job 3 months expenses ($5,000-$10,000)
Single, variable income 6 months expenses ($10,000-$20,000)
Family, dual income 3-4 months expenses ($8,000-$15,000)
Family, single income 6 months expenses ($15,000-$30,000)
Self-employed 6-12 months expenses ($20,000-$50,000)

What NOT to Do

  • Don’t put emergency money in CDs (withdrawal penalties)
  • Don’t invest it in stocks (“I’ll just sell if I need it” — what if the market is down 30%?)
  • Don’t keep it in a 0.01% checking account (you’re losing $400/year on every $10K at current rates)

3-12 Months: Short-Term Goals

Strategy: High-Yield Savings (Same as Emergency Fund)

For goals under 12 months, the strategy is identical to your emergency fund — high-yield savings only. The difference is you can keep these funds in separate buckets.

Using Savings Buckets

Bank Bucket Feature How It Works
Ally Bank Savings Buckets Create named buckets within one savings account (vacation, car, etc.)
SoFi Vaults Separate named vaults with individual APY
Capital One 360 Multiple savings accounts Open separate accounts for each goal, all at 3.90% APY

Example: $500/Month Vacation Fund

Month Contribution Interest (4.00% APY) Balance
1 $500 $1.67 $501.67
3 $500 $5.02 $1,506.69
6 $500 $10.07 $3,020.42
9 $500 $15.13 $4,541.20
12 $500 $20.20 $6,069.04

You earn ~$69 in interest over 12 months. Small but risk-free and better than the $6 you’d earn at a big bank.

1-2 Years: Medium-Term Goals

Strategy: High-Yield Savings or No-Penalty CDs

At 1-2 years, you can consider no-penalty CDs to lock in today’s rate if you think APYs will drop.

Option Rate Liquidity Best When
High-yield savings 4.00% (variable) Instant You think rates will stay flat or rise
No-penalty CD 3.80-4.10% Withdraw anytime after 7 days You think rates will drop soon
Treasury bills (6-month) 4.20-4.50% Sell on secondary market or hold to maturity You want state tax exemption

No-Penalty CD Comparison

Bank No-Penalty CD Term APY Minimum
Ally 11 months 3.90% $0
Marcus 7 months 3.85% $500
CIT Bank 11 months 3.80% $1,000
Discover Does not offer no-penalty

Treasury Bills: The Tax-Efficient Option

If you live in a high state-tax state (CA, NY, NJ, MN), Treasury bills save you money because interest is exempt from state income tax:

State Tax Rate T-Bill Yield Tax-Equivalent HYSA Rate
0% (TX, FL, WA) 4.30% 4.30% (no advantage)
5% 4.30% 4.53% equivalent
9% (CA) 4.30% 4.73% equivalent
10.9% (NY top) 4.30% 4.83% equivalent

Buy T-bills through TreasuryDirect.gov or your brokerage (Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard).

2-3 Years: Approaching a Major Purchase

Strategy: CD Ladder + High-Yield Savings

Build a CD ladder with maturities aligned to when you’ll need the money.

CD Ladder Example: Saving $60K for a Down Payment

Tranche Amount CD Term APY Matures
1 $15,000 6-month 4.50% Oct 2026
2 $15,000 12-month 4.30% Apr 2027
3 $15,000 18-month 4.20% Oct 2027
4 $15,000 24-month 4.10% Apr 2028

Total interest earned: ~$5,000 over 2 years — all FDIC-insured, zero risk.

As each CD matures, you either renew at the current rate or move the money to savings if you’re close to your purchase date.

Best CD Rates (April 2026)

Term Discover Marcus CIT Bank Ally
6 months 4.50% 4.40% 4.35% 4.30%
12 months 4.30% 4.25% 4.20% 4.10%
18 months 4.20% 4.15% 4.10% 4.00%
24 months 4.10% 4.05% 4.00% 3.90%

3-5 Years: House Down Payment or Major Goal

Strategy: CDs + Short-Term Bond Allocation (Optional)

At 3-5 years, you have slightly more flexibility but still need principal protection.

Keep everything FDIC-insured. Use a CD ladder with 1-3 year maturities.

Moderate Option: 80% CDs/Savings + 20% Short-Term Bonds

Allocation Vehicle Expected Return Risk
80% CD ladder + high-yield savings 4.00-4.30% None
20% Vanguard Short-Term Bond ETF (BSV) 3.50-5.00% Low (can fluctuate ±3%)
Blended 3.90-4.45% Very low

What About I-Bonds?

Feature Details
Current rate ~3.50% (adjusts every 6 months with inflation)
Purchase limit $10,000/year per person
Lock-up period Can’t redeem for 12 months; lose 3 months interest if redeemed before 5 years
Best for 3-5 year savings with inflation protection
Tax advantage State tax exempt; federal tax deferred until redemption

I-Bonds work well for 3-5 year goals if you buy early enough to clear the 12-month lock-up before you need the money.

5-10 Years: Investing Becomes Appropriate

Strategy: 60/40 or 70/30 Stock/Bond Portfolio

With a 5-10 year horizon, investing historically outperforms savings by a wide margin.

Why Investing Beats Savings Over 5+ Years

Scenario $50K in HYSA (4.00%) $50K in 60/40 Portfolio (7.5%)
After 5 years $60,833 $71,781
After 7 years $65,816 $82,060
After 10 years $74,012 $104,035
Extra from investing +$30,023 over 10 years
Asset Allocation Fund Why
US stocks 40% VTI or FZROX Growth engine
International stocks 20% VXUS or FZILX Diversification
US bonds 30% BND or FXNAX Stability and income
Short-term Treasury 10% VGSH Liquidity buffer

Glide Path: Shift to Safety as the Goal Approaches

Years Until Goal Stock Allocation Bond/Cash Allocation
10 years 60-70% 30-40%
7 years 50-60% 40-50%
5 years 40-50% 50-60%
3 years 20-30% 70-80%
1 year 0-10% 90-100% (move to savings/CDs)

As you get within 2-3 years of needing the money, shift aggressively into savings and CDs. Don’t let market timing ruin a goal you’ve been saving for.

10-20 Years: College Savings or Early Retirement

Strategy: 80/20 Stock/Bond Portfolio (or 529 for Education)

Goal Best Vehicle Tax Advantage
College savings 529 plan → age-based portfolio State tax deduction + tax-free growth for education
Early retirement Roth IRA + taxable brokerage Roth: tax-free withdrawals; Taxable: flexibility
General wealth building Taxable brokerage Tax-loss harvesting, no contribution limits

College Savings: 529 Plan

Child’s Age Stock Allocation Bond Allocation Suggested Fund
0-5 80-90% 10-20% Aggressive age-based option
6-10 70-80% 20-30% Moderate age-based option
11-14 50-60% 40-50% Conservative age-based option
15-17 20-30% 70-80% Capital preservation option

Growth Projection: $500/Month for 15 Years

Strategy Annual Return Total Contributed Ending Balance Growth
High-yield savings (4.00%) 4.00% $90,000 $123,241 +$33,241
60/40 portfolio 7.50% $90,000 $165,891 +$75,891
80/20 portfolio 9.00% $90,000 $194,724 +$104,724

The 80/20 portfolio earns $71,483 MORE than savings over 15 years on the same $500/month contribution. That’s the cost of being too conservative with long-term money.

20+ Years: Retirement and Legacy

Strategy: 90/10 or 100% Stock Portfolio

With 20+ years, you can ride out any market downturn. The 2008 crash recovered in ~5 years. Even a 100% stock portfolio has never lost money over any 20-year period in US market history.

Asset Allocation Fund Expense Ratio
US total market 60% VTI / FZROX 0.03% / 0.00%
International stocks 30% VXUS / FZILX 0.07% / 0.00%
Bonds (optional) 10% BND 0.03%

The Cost of Being Too Conservative Long-Term

Portfolio 30-Year Growth of $100K Difference
100% savings (4.00%) $324,340 Baseline
60/40 portfolio (7.50%) $868,219 +$543,879
90/10 portfolio (9.50%) $1,559,091 +$1,234,751

Keeping long-term retirement money in a savings account costs you over $1 million in lost growth over 30 years on a $100K initial investment.

Timeline Decision Matrix

Question Answer Strategy
Do I know exactly when I need the money? Yes, within 2 years High-yield savings or CDs
Do I know exactly when I need the money? Yes, 3-5 years CD ladder + conservative bonds
Do I know exactly when I need the money? Yes, 5-10 years 60/40 portfolio with glide path
Do I NOT know when I’ll need it? Could be anytime High-yield savings (treat as emergency)
Do I NOT know when I’ll need it? Probably 5+ years 60/40 portfolio, shift to savings when timeline firms up
Is this retirement money? Yes Maximum stock allocation, reduce as retirement approaches

Common Mistakes by Timeline

Mistake Why It’s Wrong Fix
Investing emergency fund in stocks Could lose 30% right when you need it Keep in high-yield savings, period
Putting house down payment in index funds Market drop could delay your purchase by years CDs and savings for anything under 3 years
Keeping retirement money in savings Lose $500K-$1M+ in growth over 30 years Invest in diversified stock/bond portfolio
Not adjusting as the goal gets closer A market crash 1 year before you need money is devastating Glide from stocks to bonds/cash as you approach your date
Ignoring inflation on long-term savings 3% inflation cuts purchasing power 26% over 10 years Must earn more than inflation on 5+ year goals
WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy