Use these tables to calculate CD returns at various rates, terms, and deposit amounts.
CD Returns by Deposit Amount (2026 Rates)
At 4.50% APY (Competitive Online Rate)
| Deposit | 6 Months | 1 Year | 2 Years | 3 Years | 5 Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000 | $22 | $45 | $92 | $141 | $246 |
| $5,000 | $111 | $225 | $460 | $706 | $1,231 |
| $10,000 | $223 | $450 | $920 | $1,412 | $2,462 |
| $25,000 | $556 | $1,125 | $2,300 | $3,529 | $6,154 |
| $50,000 | $1,113 | $2,250 | $4,601 | $7,058 | $12,308 |
| $100,000 | $2,225 | $4,500 | $9,203 | $14,117 | $24,618 |
At 5.00% APY
| Deposit | 6 Months | 1 Year | 2 Years | 3 Years | 5 Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000 | $25 | $50 | $103 | $158 | $276 |
| $5,000 | $124 | $250 | $513 | $789 | $1,381 |
| $10,000 | $248 | $500 | $1,025 | $1,577 | $2,763 |
| $25,000 | $620 | $1,250 | $2,563 | $3,941 | $6,907 |
| $50,000 | $1,240 | $2,500 | $5,125 | $7,881 | $13,814 |
| $100,000 | $2,480 | $5,000 | $10,250 | $15,763 | $27,628 |
At 0.50% APY (Typical Big Bank Rate)
| Deposit | 6 Months | 1 Year | 2 Years | 3 Years | 5 Years |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | $25 | $50 | $100 | $151 | $253 |
| $25,000 | $63 | $125 | $251 | $377 | $631 |
| $50,000 | $125 | $250 | $501 | $754 | $1,263 |
| $100,000 | $250 | $500 | $1,003 | $1,508 | $2,525 |
The difference matters: $100,000 for 5 years at 5.00% earns $27,628 vs only $2,525 at 0.50%. That’s $25,103 more just for choosing a better bank.
Current Best CD Rates (January 2026)
| Term | Best Rate (APY) | Typical Online Rate | Big Bank Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 months | 4.75-5.00% | 4.25-4.50% | 0.15-0.50% |
| 6 months | 4.50-4.85% | 4.00-4.50% | 0.15-0.50% |
| 1 year | 4.25-4.65% | 4.00-4.25% | 0.20-0.50% |
| 18 months | 4.15-4.50% | 3.75-4.15% | 0.25-0.50% |
| 2 years | 4.00-4.35% | 3.50-4.00% | 0.25-0.50% |
| 3 years | 3.75-4.15% | 3.25-3.75% | 0.25-0.50% |
| 5 years | 3.50-4.00% | 3.25-3.50% | 0.25-0.50% |
Rates from FDIC-insured banks and credit unions. Updated quarterly.
CD Ladder Strategy
How a 5-Year CD Ladder Works
Split $50,000 across 5 CDs with staggered maturity dates:
| CD | Amount | Term | APY | Maturity | Interest Earned |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD 1 | $10,000 | 1 year | 4.50% | Year 1 → Reinvest for 5 years | $450 |
| CD 2 | $10,000 | 2 years | 4.25% | Year 2 → Reinvest for 5 years | $869 |
| CD 3 | $10,000 | 3 years | 4.00% | Year 3 → Reinvest for 5 years | $1,249 |
| CD 4 | $10,000 | 4 years | 3.85% | Year 4 → Reinvest for 5 years | $1,637 |
| CD 5 | $10,000 | 5 years | 3.75% | Year 5 → Reinvest for 5 years | $2,022 |
Benefits: After year 1, you have $10,000 maturing every year (liquidity) while earning higher long-term rates.
CD Ladder vs Single CD vs High-Yield Savings
| Strategy | $50,000 Over 5 Years | Total Interest | Access to Cash |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single 5-year CD at 3.75% | One lump at maturity | $10,112 | None for 5 years |
| 5-year CD ladder (see above) | $10K matures yearly | $9,827 | $10K per year |
| High-yield savings at 4.00% | Anytime withdrawal | $10,833 | Anytime |
| Checking account at 0.01% | Anytime | $25 | Anytime |
In a declining rate environment, locking in with CDs wins. In a stable/rising rate environment, HYSAs may outpace CDs.
CD vs Other Safe Investments
| Investment | Current Yield | FDIC Insured | Liquidity | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Year CD | 4.25-4.65% | Yes ($250K) | Locked (early withdrawal penalty) | Federal + state income tax |
| High-yield savings | 4.00-4.50% | Yes ($250K) | Anytime | Federal + state income tax |
| Money market account | 3.75-4.25% | Yes ($250K) | Limited (6 transfers/mo) | Federal + state income tax |
| 1-Year Treasury bill | 4.30-4.60% | N/A (gov backed) | Sell on secondary market | Federal only (no state tax) |
| I Bonds | 3.11% (current) | N/A (gov backed) | 1-year lockup, then flexible | Federal only (no state tax) |
| Series EE Bonds | 2.60% (fixed) | N/A (gov backed) | 1-year lockup | Federal only (no state tax) |
Early Withdrawal Penalties
| CD Term | Typical Penalty | Amount Lost on $10,000 at 4.50% |
|---|---|---|
| 3 months | 1 month interest | $38 |
| 6 months | 3 months interest | $113 |
| 1 year | 6 months interest | $225 |
| 2 years | 6-9 months interest | $225-$338 |
| 3 years | 9-12 months interest | $338-$450 |
| 5 years | 12-18 months interest | $450-$675 |
Some banks offer no-penalty CDs with slightly lower rates. Worth considering if you might need access.
CD Interest and Taxes
| Tax Bracket | Tax on $5,000 CD Interest | After-Tax Return (4.50% CD) |
|---|---|---|
| 10% | $500 | 4.05% |
| 12% | $600 | 3.96% |
| 22% | $1,100 | 3.51% |
| 24% | $1,200 | 3.42% |
| 32% | $1,600 | 3.06% |
| 35% | $1,750 | 2.93% |
| 37% | $1,850 | 2.84% |
CD interest is taxed as ordinary income. Consider holding CDs in tax-advantaged accounts (IRA CD) to defer or eliminate taxes.
When CDs Make Sense
| Scenario | Why CDs Work |
|---|---|
| Saving for a house (1-3 years out) | Guaranteed return, no market risk |
| Emergency fund tier 2 | 3-6 months expenses in accessible savings, remainder in CDs |
| Rates are high and expected to fall | Lock in today’s high rates before they drop |
| You need to separate savings from spending | Locked money = can’t impulsively spend it |
| Near retirement and need safety | Preserve capital with guaranteed yield |
| FDIC insurance matters | Full government backing up to $250K |
When to Skip CDs
| Scenario | Better Alternative |
|---|---|
| Need access to cash anytime | High-yield savings account |
| Investing for 5+ years | Stock index funds (higher expected returns) |
| Want state tax savings | Treasury bills (exempt from state tax) |
| Rates are rising | Shorter-term CDs or HYSA to capture higher rates |
| Large amounts (over $250K) | Treasuries (no FDIC limit) or spread across banks |
Related: CD Rates | High-Yield Savings Accounts | Money Market vs Savings | CDs vs Treasury Bills | APY vs APR | Where to Keep Your Money
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