In May 2026, the best CD rates reach 4.75% APY for 12-month terms at competitive online banks — still among the highest rates in two decades. Whether you should open one right now depends on whether your emergency fund is funded, how soon you need the money, and where you think rates are going.
Short answer: If you have money you will not need for at least 6–12 months and your emergency fund is already in a liquid account, opening a CD now locks in a strong guaranteed return before rates fall further.
See best CD rates 2026 for current top picks by term.
Current CD Rate Environment (May 2026)
| CD Term | Best Online Bank Rate | FDIC National Average |
|---|---|---|
| 3-month | 4.00–4.40% APY | ~1.60% APY |
| 6-month | 4.20–4.60% APY | ~1.70% APY |
| 12-month | 4.25–4.75% APY | ~1.80% APY |
| 18-month | 4.10–4.50% APY | ~1.65% APY |
| 24-month | 4.00–4.40% APY | ~1.55% APY |
| 60-month | 3.60–4.10% APY | ~1.30% APY |
The Federal Reserve has cut rates 1.00–1.25 percentage points from the 2023 peak of 5.25–5.50%. Markets expect further modest cuts in 2026, which means CD rates at competitive banks will likely drift lower over the coming months.
The Case FOR Opening a CD Right Now
1. Rates are still historically elevated. From 2010 to 2021, the best 1-year CD rates rarely exceeded 1.00% APY. At 4.25–4.75% APY, savers are earning more on CDs than at virtually any point in the past 15 years.
2. Lock in before further Fed cuts. Every Fed rate cut reduces what banks need to pay on deposits. A CD opened today at 4.50% APY keeps earning that rate even if the Fed cuts another 0.50–1.00% point. Your HYSA will fall with the Fed; your locked CD will not.
3. Guaranteed return, no market risk. If equity markets become volatile, a CD pays the same amount regardless of what stocks do. For money you need intact at a specific future date, a guaranteed 4.50% beats a variable market return.
4. Worked example: Carlos has $15,000 he is saving for a home down payment in 18 months. He opens an 18-month CD at 4.40% APY. After 18 months he receives $15,990 — $990 in guaranteed interest. If he leaves the money in a HYSA and the Fed cuts twice, his effective rate could drop to 3.75% APY over that period, earning only ~$850.
The Case FOR Waiting (or Choosing a HYSA Instead)
1. Your emergency fund is not fully funded. Never lock your emergency fund in a CD. The 3–6 months of expenses in your emergency fund must stay in a liquid account — a HYSA, money market, or checking account. If you break a CD early to cover an emergency, you lose months of interest in penalties.
2. You might need the money soon. If there is a realistic chance you will need the funds in less than 3 months, a CD is not the right tool. A HYSA or even a high-yield checking account is more appropriate.
3. You think rates will rise. If you believe the Fed will raise rates again — possible if inflation accelerates — locking a long-term CD today means missing higher rates. A no-penalty CD or a short-term CD preserves flexibility.
Decision Framework: Should You Open a CD Now?
| Your Situation | Recommendation |
|---|---|
| Emergency fund fully funded in HYSA | Open a CD for surplus savings |
| Emergency fund not yet funded | Fund HYSA first; CD later |
| Specific goal with a date (wedding, down payment) | Open CD matching the timeline |
| No clear timeline for the money | Use a HYSA or no-penalty CD |
| Believe Fed will cut further in 2026 | Favor 18–36 month CDs over short terms |
| Uncertain about rate direction | CD ladder across 6, 12, and 24 months |
| Need flexibility | No-penalty CD instead of traditional |
What Rate Should You Expect Right Now?
The FDIC national average dramatically understates what competitive banks offer. To get a real rate:
- Compare only online banks and competitive credit unions — not your local branch or big-four bank
- Check directly at Ally, Marcus, Bread Savings, Synchrony, or Discover
- Avoid auto-renewal rates — when a CD matures and auto-renews, it often does so at a lower rate than what you could get by shopping
Current top 12-month rates: 4.50–4.75% APY. A $10,000 CD at 4.50% earns $450 in 12 months. A $25,000 CD earns $1,125.
For rates across all terms, see best CD rates 2026.
The Best CD Strategy for 2026: A Ladder
If you are unsure whether to go short or long, a CD ladder captures both:
- Short rungs (6-month, 12-month): earn today’s high rates, matures soon if you need the money
- Long rungs (2-year, 3-year): lock in today’s rates for longer in case the Fed cuts further
A basic 3-rung ladder on $15,000 ($5,000 each):
- $5,000 in a 6-month CD at 4.40% → matures November 2026
- $5,000 in a 12-month CD at 4.60% → matures May 2027
- $5,000 in a 24-month CD at 4.30% → matures May 2028
Each maturity gives you a decision point. If rates are still good, reinvest into a new 2-year CD. If rates have fallen, you’ve captured today’s rates on at least part of your portfolio.
See CD laddering strategy 2026 for the full methodology.
Are CDs a Good Investment Right Now?
CDs are not investments in the equity sense — they are guaranteed-return savings vehicles. At 4.25–4.75% APY, they outperform traditional savings accounts by a factor of 10 and beat inflation. They are the right tool for:
- Money with a known future use date
- Capital you cannot afford to lose
- Portions of a portfolio you want immune from market volatility
For a full verdict, see are CDs worth it in 2026?
Related Guides
- CD Guide 2026 — full hub with rates and strategy
- Best CD Rates 2026 — current top rates by term
- CD Rate Forecast 2026 — where rates are headed
- How Federal Reserve Decisions Affect CD Rates — rate mechanism explained
- CD Laddering Strategy 2026 — hedge both directions
- CD vs High-Yield Savings Account 2026 — which is right for you?
- No-Penalty CD Rates 2026 — stay flexible while still earning
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