For a guide to asset allocation, diversification, and building your first investment portfolio, see the Portfolio Basics hub.
What Are Bonds?
A bond is essentially a loan. When you buy a bond, you’re lending money to the issuer (government or corporation), who promises to pay you interest and return your principal at maturity.
Bond Basics
| Term |
Definition |
| Face value (par) |
Amount returned at maturity (usually $1,000) |
| Coupon |
Annual interest payment |
| Coupon rate |
Annual interest as % of face value |
| Maturity |
When the bond expires and principal is returned |
| Yield |
Your actual return based on price paid |
How a Bond Works: Example
$1,000 bond, 5% coupon, 10-year maturity:
| Year |
What You Receive |
| Years 1-9 |
$50 interest per year |
| Year 10 |
$50 interest + $1,000 principal |
| Total |
$1,500 over 10 years |
Types of Bonds
By Issuer
| Type |
Issuer |
Risk Level |
Typical Yield |
| Treasury Bonds |
U.S. Government |
Very low |
4.0-4.5% |
| Municipal Bonds |
State/local gov’t |
Low |
3.0-4.0% (tax-free) |
| Corporate (Investment Grade) |
Large companies |
Low-moderate |
5.0-6.0% |
| Corporate (High Yield) |
Riskier companies |
Moderate-high |
6.0-8.0% |
| International |
Foreign governments |
Varies |
Varies |
Treasury Securities
| Type |
Maturity |
Current Yield |
| Treasury Bills (T-Bills) |
4 weeks - 1 year |
4.5-5.0% |
| Treasury Notes |
2-10 years |
4.0-4.5% |
| Treasury Bonds |
20-30 years |
4.3-4.6% |
| I Bonds |
30 years |
Variable (inflation-adjusted) |
| TIPS |
5-30 years |
Real yield + inflation |
Municipal Bonds (Tax-Free)
| Feature |
Details |
| Federal tax |
Usually exempt |
| State tax |
Exempt if issued in your state |
| Best for |
High-income investors in high-tax states |
| Yields |
Lower nominal, but higher after-tax |
Tax-equivalent yield formula:
Municipal yield ÷ (1 - your tax rate) = Equivalent taxable yield
Example: 3% municipal bond for someone in 32% bracket:
3% ÷ (1 - 0.32) = 4.41% taxable equivalent
Corporate Bonds
| Rating |
Examples |
Risk |
Yield Premium |
| AAA |
Microsoft, J&J |
Very low |
+0.3% over Treasury |
| AA |
Apple, Berkshire |
Low |
+0.5% over Treasury |
| A |
Intel, Verizon |
Low-moderate |
+0.8% over Treasury |
| BBB |
Ford, AT&T |
Moderate |
+1.5% over Treasury |
| Below BBB |
“Junk” bonds |
High |
+3-5% over Treasury |
Bond Prices and Yields
The Inverse Relationship
When interest rates change, bond prices move in the opposite direction:
| Interest Rates |
Bond Prices |
Why |
| Rates rise |
Prices fall |
Old bonds less attractive vs. new higher rates |
| Rates fall |
Prices rise |
Old bonds more attractive vs. new lower rates |
Price Change Example
$1,000 bond, 4% coupon, 10-year maturity:
| Scenario |
Market Rate |
Bond Price |
Your Yield |
| At issue |
4% |
$1,000 |
4.0% |
| Rates rise to 5% |
5% |
~$922 |
5.0% if bought now |
| Rates fall to 3% |
3% |
~$1,085 |
3.0% if bought now |
Duration: Interest Rate Sensitivity
Duration measures how much a bond’s price moves when rates change:
| Duration |
Rate Change |
Price Change |
| 2 years |
+1% |
-2% |
| 5 years |
+1% |
-5% |
| 10 years |
+1% |
-10% |
| 20 years |
+1% |
-20% |
Rule of thumb: Longer maturity = higher duration = more price volatility
Yield Types Explained
Common Yield Measures
| Yield Type |
What It Measures |
| Coupon yield |
Annual interest ÷ face value |
| Current yield |
Annual interest ÷ current price |
| Yield to maturity (YTM) |
Total return if held to maturity |
| SEC yield (funds) |
Standardized 30-day yield |
Yield Curve
The yield curve shows rates across different maturities:
| Shape |
What It Means |
| Normal (upward) |
Longer bonds yield more (typical) |
| Flat |
Short and long bonds yield similarly |
| Inverted |
Short bonds yield more than long |
Current yield curve (2025):
| Maturity |
Yield |
| 3-month |
5.0% |
| 1-year |
4.8% |
| 2-year |
4.5% |
| 5-year |
4.2% |
| 10-year |
4.3% |
| 30-year |
4.5% |
How to Invest in Bonds
Individual Bonds
| Pros |
Cons |
| Known maturity value |
Requires significant capital |
| Predictable income |
Less diversification |
| No management fees |
Harder to research |
Where to buy: TreasuryDirect.gov (Treasuries), brokerages (corporate/muni)
Bond ETFs
| Pros |
Cons |
| Easy diversification |
No maturity date |
| Low minimums |
Prices fluctuate permanently |
| Highly liquid |
Small expense ratio |
Best bond ETFs:
| Category |
ETF |
Expense |
Yield |
| Total Bond |
BND |
0.03% |
4.5% |
| Total Bond |
AGG |
0.03% |
4.4% |
| Corporate |
LQD |
0.14% |
5.3% |
| High Yield |
HYG |
0.49% |
6.2% |
| Short-Term |
BSV |
0.04% |
4.6% |
| Long-Term |
BLV |
0.04% |
5.0% |
| TIPS |
VTIP |
0.04% |
Real + inflation |
| Municipal |
VTEB |
0.05% |
3.5% (tax-free) |
Bond Mutual Funds
| Category |
Fund |
Expense |
Minimum |
| Total Bond |
VBTLX |
0.05% |
$3,000 |
| Total Bond |
FXNAX |
0.025% |
$0 |
| Intermediate |
VSIGX |
0.05% |
$3,000 |
| Short-Term |
VSCSX |
0.10% |
$3,000 |
Building a Bond Allocation
Bond Allocation by Age
| Age |
Stock % |
Bond % |
Rationale |
| 20-30 |
90-100% |
0-10% |
Maximum growth time |
| 30-40 |
80-90% |
10-20% |
Still long horizon |
| 40-50 |
70-80% |
20-30% |
Increasing stability |
| 50-60 |
60-70% |
30-40% |
Approaching retirement |
| 60+ |
40-60% |
40-60% |
Preserve capital |
Types of Bonds for Different Goals
| Goal |
Best Bond Types |
| Stability |
Short-term Treasuries, TIPS |
| Income |
Corporate bonds, high-yield (with risk) |
| Tax efficiency |
Municipal bonds (taxable accounts) |
| Inflation protection |
TIPS, I Bonds |
Sample Bond Portfolio ($100,000 allocation)
| Holding |
Allocation |
Purpose |
| BND (Total Bond) |
50% |
Core holding |
| VTIP (TIPS) |
20% |
Inflation protection |
| VGSH (Short-Term Treasury) |
20% |
Stability, liquidity |
| HYG (High Yield) |
10% |
Higher income (higher risk) |
Bonds in Different Accounts
Tax Location Strategy
| Account |
Best Bond Types |
| Taxable |
Municipal bonds (tax-free) |
| Traditional IRA/401(k) |
Taxable bonds (tax-deferred) |
| Roth IRA |
Can be either (no tax advantage) |
Why Location Matters
$10,000 in bonds yielding 5%, 22% tax bracket:
| Account |
Annual Interest |
Tax |
Net Income |
| Taxable corporate bond |
$500 |
$110 |
$390 |
| Taxable muni bond (3.5%) |
$350 |
$0 |
$350 |
| IRA (corporate bond) |
$500 |
$0* |
$500* |
*Tax deferred until withdrawal
Bond Risks
Interest Rate Risk
| Risk |
Impact |
| Rates rise |
Bond prices fall |
| Longer duration |
Greater price volatility |
| Mitigation |
Hold to maturity or use short-term bonds |
Credit Risk (Default Risk)
| Rating |
Default Risk |
| Treasury |
Zero (U.S. government) |
| AAA/AA |
Very low |
| A/BBB |
Low to moderate |
| Below BBB |
Higher |
Inflation Risk
| Risk |
Impact |
| Inflation rises |
Fixed payments lose purchasing power |
| Real return |
Nominal yield - inflation |
| Mitigation |
TIPS, I Bonds |
Reinvestment Risk
| Risk |
Impact |
| Rates fall |
Interest payments reinvested at lower rates |
| Coupons |
May earn less when reinvested |
Current Bond Market (2025)
Current Yields
| Bond Type |
Yield |
| 10-Year Treasury |
4.3% |
| Investment Grade Corporate |
5.2% |
| High Yield Corporate |
7.0% |
| Municipal (AAA) |
3.5% |
Outlook Considerations
| Factor |
Implication |
| Fed policy |
Rate cuts could boost prices |
| Inflation |
Higher inflation hurts bonds |
| Economic growth |
Recession risk favors Treasuries |
| Credit spreads |
Tight spreads = less reward for risk |
Key Takeaways
-
Bonds provide stability and income — Essential portfolio component as you age
-
Prices and yields move inversely — Rising rates mean falling bond prices
-
Duration measures interest rate risk — Longer maturity = more volatility
-
Bond funds vs individual bonds — Funds for most investors, individuals for predictability
-
Use tax-efficient placement — Munis in taxable, corporates in IRA
-
Current yields are attractive — 4-5% is best in many years
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