What Is a Certificate of Deposit?

A certificate of deposit (CD) is a timed deposit account at a bank or credit union. You deposit a specific sum of money, agree to leave it untouched for a defined period β€” called the term β€” and in return receive a fixed, guaranteed interest rate for the full duration of that term.

CDs are FDIC insured up to $250,000 at banks (NCUA insured at credit unions for the same amount), making them one of the safest savings products available. They are not investments β€” there is no market risk, no possibility of losing principal, and no uncertainty about the return you'll receive.

The "certificate" aspect is largely historical β€” in earlier decades, banks issued a literal paper certificate when you opened the account. Today everything is digital, but the name has stuck. What hasn't changed is the core mechanism: fixed rate, fixed term, guaranteed outcome.

A CD gives you a guaranteed, fixed interest rate for a set period β€” typically higher than a savings account β€” in exchange for agreeing not to withdraw your money before the term ends. If you do withdraw early, you pay a penalty. CDs are FDIC insured and carry zero investment risk.

How a CD Works β€” Start to Finish

The lifecycle of a CD is simple and predictable β€” which is a large part of its appeal. Here's every stage from opening to maturity:

πŸ’΅

Open & Deposit

Choose your bank, term and deposit amount. Rate is locked at this moment.

πŸ”’

Rate Locked

Your APY is fixed for the full term. Fed rate cuts or rises don't affect you.

πŸ“…

Term Runs

Interest accrues daily. You cannot add money to an existing CD during the term.

πŸ“¬

Maturity Notice

Bank alerts you 7–14 days before maturity. Act within the grace period (usually 7–10 days).

βœ…

Renew or Withdraw

Withdraw your principal + interest, or roll into a new CD. Auto-renewal applies if you do nothing.

⚠️ The Auto-Renewal Trap

If you don't instruct your bank during the grace period at maturity, most CDs automatically roll over into a new CD of the same term β€” at whatever the bank's current rate is, which may be significantly lower than what you originally received. Always set a calendar reminder for your CD maturity date and compare rates before the grace period expires. Missing this is one of the most common and costly CD mistakes.

Best CD Rates by Term β€” January 2025

With the Federal Reserve having cut rates through late 2024, CD rates have declined from their 2023 peaks β€” but remain historically excellent. The 6–12 month term currently offers the best combination of rate and reasonable commitment length.

3 Months
4.75%
Best APY
6 Months
5.15%
Best APY
12 Months
5.40%
Best APY
Sweet Spot
2 Years
4.80%
Best APY
5 Years
4.30%
Best APY
πŸ’‘ Why Is the 12-Month Rate Higher Than 5-Year?

This is called an inverted yield curve β€” a situation where short-term rates exceed long-term rates. It typically occurs when markets expect interest rates to fall in the future. Banks price longer-term CDs lower because they anticipate that they'll be able to reinvest at lower rates when those CDs eventually mature. For savers, this is actually useful information: locking in a 12-month CD at 5.40% is likely capturing near-peak rates before further Fed cuts bring everything down.

Best CD Rates by Provider β€” January 2025

Online banks and credit unions consistently offer the most competitive CD rates. The following institutions have appeared regularly at the top of best-buy tables. Always verify current rates directly β€” they change frequently.

InstitutionTermAPYMin DepositEarly Withdrawal PenaltyFDIC/NCUA
Marcus by Goldman Sachs12 months5.40%$500270 days interest$250K
Bread Savings12 months5.35%$1,500180 days interest$250K
Ally Bank12 months5.00%$0150 days interest$250K
Ally Bank (No-Penalty)11 months4.55%$0None$250K
Discover Bank12 months5.00%$2,5006 months interest$250K
Synchrony Bank12 months5.00%$090 days interest$250K
Pentagon Federal CU12 months5.15%$1,000180 days interest$250K (NCUA)
Sallie Mae Bank6 months5.15%$2,50090 days interest$250K
Chase (traditional)12 months0.01–1.50%$1,000Varies$250K
Bank of America (trad.)12 months0.03–0.05%$1,000Varies$250K

⚠️ APYs as of January 2025 β€” change frequently. Traditional banks included for comparison only. Always verify rates and FDIC status directly before opening. Not a recommendation of any specific institution.

Early Withdrawal Penalties β€” The Real Cost of Breaking a CD

This is the most important section to understand before opening any CD. Early withdrawal penalties are expressed as a number of days' worth of interest β€” not as a flat fee or a percentage of your balance. The actual dollar impact depends on your deposit size, your rate, and how early you break the CD.

πŸ”’ Typical Early Withdrawal Penalties by Term
Most banks express penalties as days of interest. Here are standard ranges.
3 months
~90 days
interest forfeited
6 months
~90–180 days
interest forfeited
12 months
~150–270 days
interest forfeited
5 years
~150–365 days
interest forfeited
πŸ’‘ Real Example β€” Breaking a 12-Month CD at Month 4
Deposit$20,000
CD APY5.00%
Interest earned in 4 months$333
Penalty (150 days interest)βˆ’$411
Net interest receivedβˆ’$78 (penalty exceeds earned interest)
Total received back$19,922

The example above illustrates the most important rule about CDs: if you break a CD very early, the penalty can exceed the interest you've earned β€” meaning you receive less than your original deposit back. This is not theoretical. It happens to people who open CDs without fully thinking through their timeline. Never put money in a CD that you might need before maturity.

No-Penalty CDs β€” The Best of Both Worlds?

Several banks now offer "no-penalty" CDs β€” also called liquid CDs β€” that allow you to withdraw your money before the term ends without paying any penalty. They sound like the perfect product: a fixed, higher rate with no commitment downside. Understanding the trade-offs helps you decide if they're right for you.

  • No-penalty CDs typically pay slightly less than standard CDs of the same term β€” usually 0.2% to 0.6% less APY. The bank is accepting more withdrawal risk and prices accordingly.
  • Most have a minimum waiting period before you can withdraw without penalty β€” commonly 6 or 7 days after opening. You cannot withdraw the instant you open one.
  • Withdrawals are typically all-or-nothing β€” you generally must withdraw the full balance, not a partial amount. Check the specific terms.
  • They compare well to HYSAs in periods of rate cuts β€” if a no-penalty CD pays 4.75% and the best HYSA pays 4.90%, the CD locks in its rate while the HYSA falls with the Fed.
βœ… When a No-Penalty CD Makes Sense

A no-penalty CD is most useful when: you expect savings rates to fall (the Fed is cutting), you want to lock in a rate without full commitment, and the no-penalty CD rate is close to or above the best HYSA rate. It functions as a "rate insurance policy" β€” you lock in today's rate but retain the ability to exit if your circumstances change. Compare the no-penalty CD rate directly against the best available HYSA before choosing.

Types of CDs β€” Which Variant Fits Your Situation

Most Common

Standard (Traditional) CD

Fixed rate, fixed term, no early access without penalty. The bread-and-butter CD product offered by virtually every bank. Best rates available here.

βœ… Highest rates, guaranteed return, simple
❌ No access before maturity without penalty
Flexible

No-Penalty CD

Withdraw your full balance any time after the initial waiting period with no penalty. Slightly lower rate than standard CDs. Good bridge between HYSA flexibility and CD certainty.

βœ… No early withdrawal penalty β€” can exit anytime
❌ Lower rate than standard CDs of same term
Rate Hedge

Bump-Up CD

Allows you to "bump up" to a higher rate once during the term if the bank's CD rate rises. Lower starting rate than standard CDs. Useful if you're uncertain about rate direction.

βœ… Can increase rate if rates rise during term
❌ Lower initial rate. Usually only one bump allowed
IRA Option

IRA CD

A CD held inside an Individual Retirement Account. Combines the fixed rate, guaranteed return of a CD with the tax advantages of an IRA (tax-deferred or tax-free growth depending on IRA type).

βœ… Tax-advantaged interest growth
❌ IRA withdrawal rules apply in addition to CD terms

CD Earnings Calculator β€” See Your Exact Return

Enter your deposit amount, APY, and term to calculate your exact interest earned and final balance at maturity.

πŸ“Š CD Return Calculator

See exactly what a CD will earn. Educational estimate only.
πŸ“Š CD vs HYSA Comparison
πŸ“Š

Enter details and
click Calculate
to see your return

The CD Ladder Strategy β€” Lock In High Rates While Keeping Access

The CD ladder is one of the most elegant strategies in personal finance. Instead of putting all your savings into a single CD, you split it across multiple CDs with different maturity dates. This gives you competitive fixed rates while ensuring a portion of your money becomes available regularly.

Example: $20,000 Split Into a 4-Rung Ladder
Rung 1
$5,000 Β· 3 months Β· 4.75%
Matures Apr 2025
Rung 2
$5,000 Β· 6 months Β· 5.15%
Matures Jul 2025
Rung 3
$5,000 Β· 9 months Β· 5.30%
Matures Oct 2025
Rung 4
$5,000 Β· 12 months Β· 5.40%
Matures Jan 2026
πŸ’§
Quarterly Access
$5,000 becomes available every 3 months. You always have funds maturing soon.
πŸ”’
Rate Protection
Even if rates fall, each rung earned its locked rate for its full term β€” you're not fully exposed.
πŸ“ˆ
Reinvestment Opportunity
Each maturity is a chance to reassess β€” reinvest at new rates or redirect funds as needed.

When each rung matures, you have a decision: if rates are still good, roll it into a new 12-month CD at the best available rate. If you need the money, withdraw it penalty-free. If rates have fallen dramatically, consider shorter terms for more flexibility. The ladder keeps you perpetually in motion β€” never fully locked in, never fully exposed to rate changes.

CD vs HYSA β€” When Each One Wins

The choice between a CD and a high-yield savings account is not about which is "better" β€” it is about which fits your specific situation, timeline, and view of where interest rates are heading.

πŸ“Š Choose a CD When...
βœ“You won't need the money for the full term
βœ“You expect rates to fall (lock in now)
βœ“The CD rate meaningfully exceeds the best HYSA
βœ“You want guaranteed, predictable income
βœ“You're building a CD ladder for structured liquidity
βœ“Saving for a known goal with a known timeline
Best for: Known-timeline savings, rate-lock strategy, disciplined savers
πŸ’§ Choose a HYSA When...
βœ“You might need the money before a fixed term ends
βœ“You expect rates to rise (benefit from increases)
βœ“The HYSA rate matches or beats available CD rates
βœ“This is your emergency fund
βœ“You want to add money regularly
βœ“You want maximum flexibility with no conditions
Best for: Emergency fund, flexible timeline, regular savers, rate uncertainty

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes β€” arguably more so than in previous years. When the Federal Reserve is in a rate-cutting cycle (as it was in late 2024 and is expected to continue in 2025), locking in today's rates via a CD protects your return from those cuts. A HYSA that pays 5.00% today may pay 3.50% in 12 months if the Fed cuts aggressively. A 12-month CD opened today at 5.00% continues to earn 5.00% for the full 12 months regardless. The "falling rates = lock in a CD" logic is sound and widely accepted by financial planners.
No β€” standard CDs are funded at opening and that's it. You cannot make additional deposits to an existing CD during its term. If you want to add money, you open a new, separate CD. This is one of the practical reasons the CD ladder strategy is popular β€” you can open new rungs periodically with new money rather than trying to add to existing ones. Some banks offer "add-on" CDs as a product variant that allows additional deposits, but these are less common and typically offer lower rates than standard CDs.
CD interest is taxed as ordinary income in the year it is credited to your account β€” regardless of whether you withdraw it. This is an important nuance: if you open a 2-year CD that pays interest only at maturity, you still owe taxes on the accrued interest each year it accrues (constructive receipt rules). Your bank will send a Form 1099-INT showing annual interest earned. If your CD is held inside an IRA, the tax treatment follows IRA rules (tax-deferred for traditional, tax-free for Roth). Always factor in your marginal tax rate when comparing CD after-tax returns against other options.
Your CD is FDIC insured up to $250,000 per depositor per bank. If the bank fails, the FDIC steps in β€” either paying you out directly or arranging for another bank to take over the deposit. In FDIC-managed bank failures, CDs are typically either paid out in full at maturity or assumed by an acquiring bank at the original terms. The FDIC has resolved hundreds of bank failures in its history without any depositor losing a dollar of insured funds. Always verify FDIC membership before opening a CD at a bank you haven't used before.
For most people with savings well below $250,000, the choice is primarily about flexibility rather than protection. One large CD maximises simplicity. Several smaller CDs in a ladder maximises flexibility by giving you staggered maturity dates and periodic access. If your total savings approach $250,000, splitting across two or more banks ensures full FDIC coverage. For practical savings planning, the CD ladder approach β€” dividing into 3–5 CDs of different terms β€” gives the best balance of competitive rates and regular access without sacrificing too much yield.
Important: All CD rates quoted are indicative as of January 2025 and change frequently. Early withdrawal penalties vary by institution and product β€” always read full terms before opening a CD. WiseInvestorPath does not recommend specific financial institutions or products. This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Always verify FDIC status directly. Read our full Disclaimer.