A certificate of deposit (CD) works by locking your money at a bank for a fixed period in exchange for a guaranteed interest rate. At the end of the term, you receive your original deposit plus all interest earned. You cannot access the funds early without paying a penalty.

This is the complete guide to CD mechanics — how interest accrues, what happens at maturity, and when a CD makes financial sense.

See the CD Guide 2026 for current rates, laddering strategies, and comparisons.

Step-by-Step: How a CD Works

  1. Choose a bank and term. Online banks consistently offer the highest rates. Terms run from 3 months to 5+ years.
  2. Deposit your money. Most CDs require a one-time deposit at opening. Minimum deposits range from $0 (Ally, Capital One) to $2,500+ (Discover, Wells Fargo). See CD minimum deposits by bank.
  3. Your money is locked. The bank pays you a fixed APY. You cannot add to or withdraw from the account during the term without penalty.
  4. Interest accrues. Most CDs compound interest daily. Some compound monthly. Your balance grows automatically.
  5. CD matures. At the end of the term, the CD matures. You receive principal plus all interest.
  6. Choose what to do. Withdraw, reinvest in a new CD, or let it auto-renew. See what to do when your CD matures.

How CD Interest Is Calculated

CDs pay interest using compound interest — most commonly compounded daily. The stated APY (annual percentage yield) already accounts for compounding.

Simple estimate (one-year CD):

Interest earned = Principal x APY

Full compound formula:

Final Value = Principal x (1 + r/n)^(n x t)

Where r = annual rate, n = compounding periods per year, t = years

Principal APY Term Interest Earned Final Balance
$5,000 4.50% 12 months $225 $5,225
$10,000 4.50% 12 months $450 $10,450
$25,000 4.50% 12 months $1,125 $26,125
$10,000 4.75% 24 months $971 $10,971
$10,000 4.25% 60 months $2,313 $12,313

Worked example: Maria deposits $10,000 into a 12-month CD at 4.50% APY with daily compounding. After 365 days her balance is $10,450.50 — the $0.50 extra comes from daily compounding vs. the simple APY estimate.

CD Terms Available in 2026

Term Best For Typical APY Range (2026)
3-month Short-term parking, uncertainty about rates 4.00–4.40%
6-month Known expense in 6 months 4.20–4.60%
12-month Standard savings goal 4.25–4.75%
18-month Rate-lock before potential Fed cuts 4.10–4.50%
24-month Medium-term goal (down payment, renovation) 4.00–4.40%
36-month Long-term goal, portfolio diversification 3.80–4.30%
60-month Maximum rate-lock period 3.60–4.10%

Current best rates are concentrated in the 6–18 month range as banks expect gradual rate cuts ahead. The CD rate forecast 2026 covers where rates are headed.

Types of CDs

Not all CDs work the same way. Standard CDs are the most common, but several variations offer different trade-offs:

CD Type Key Feature Best For
Traditional CD Fixed rate, fixed term Predictable savings goals
No-penalty CD Withdraw early without fee Emergency fund alternative
Bump-up CD Request a rate increase once during term Rising-rate environments
Callable CD Bank can call it early at a premium rate Higher initial rate, some risk
Add-on CD Deposit more money after opening Building savings over time
Jumbo CD Minimum $100,000 deposit Large balance holders
IRA CD CD held inside a traditional or Roth IRA Retirement savers
Brokered CD Purchased through a brokerage Investors wanting secondary market liquidity

Early Withdrawal Penalties

Withdrawing from a standard CD before maturity triggers a penalty — typically expressed as months of interest:

CD Term Common Penalty
Under 12 months 3 months interest
12–24 months 6 months interest
24–36 months 12 months interest
36–60 months 18 months interest
60+ months 24 months interest

Example: A $10,000 CD at 4.50% APY with a 6-month interest penalty. Six months of interest = $225. Breaking this CD early costs you $225 — the bank keeps that amount from your earned interest.

If there is any chance you will need the money early, consider a no-penalty CD instead. For the full breakdown of penalties by bank, see CD early withdrawal penalties.

What Happens When a CD Matures

At maturity, you enter a grace period (typically 7–10 calendar days). During this window you can:

  • Withdraw everything — principal plus interest — with no penalty
  • Reinvest in a new CD at the current rate (same term or different)
  • Transfer to a savings or checking account at the same bank
  • Do nothing — most banks auto-renew for the same term at the current rate

Auto-renewal is the default if you miss the grace period. The new rate may be higher or lower than your original rate. Set a calendar reminder a week before maturity. For a full decision framework, see what to do when your CD matures.

CD vs. High-Yield Savings Account

Feature CD HYSA
Rate Fixed (guaranteed) Variable (can drop)
Access Locked until maturity Withdraw anytime
Penalty for early access Yes None
FDIC insured Yes Yes
Best 2026 rate ~4.75% APY (1-yr) ~4.50% APY
Best for Known future goal Emergency fund, ongoing savings

A CD beats a HYSA when you have a specific future goal and a date attached to it — and when you want to lock in today’s rate before the Fed cuts. If you might need the money, a HYSA wins. Full comparison: CD vs. HYSA 2026.

Are CDs Safe?

CDs are among the safest savings vehicles available. Risks:

  • FDIC coverage: Your principal is insured up to $250,000 per bank — you cannot lose money through bank failure
  • Inflation risk: If inflation rises above your CD rate, purchasing power erodes (low risk in 2026)
  • Opportunity cost: Rates could rise during your term — your locked rate could underperform new CDs
  • Liquidity risk: Early withdrawal costs you months of interest

Verdict: CDs carry virtually no default risk for balances under $250,000. The main risks are inflation and lost opportunity if rates rise. See are CDs safe?

Tax Treatment of CD Interest

CD interest is taxable as ordinary income in the year it is received or credited to your account — not necessarily in the year you withdraw. Banks report CD interest on Form 1099-INT annually. If your CD spans two calendar years, you may owe taxes in both years even though you haven’t touched the money.

Exception: CDs held inside an IRA (traditional or Roth) follow IRA tax rules. See IRA vs CD 2026 for the comparison.

When CDs Make Sense

CDs are a good fit when:

  • You have a specific savings goal with a known date (wedding, down payment, tuition)
  • You want to lock in today’s rates before the Fed cuts
  • You are building a CD ladder for both liquidity and yield
  • You have already funded your emergency fund in a liquid HYSA

CDs are a poor fit when:

  • You are still building your emergency fund (needs to be liquid)
  • You think you might need the money before the CD matures
  • You are investing for growth over 5+ years (stocks typically outperform)
WealthVieu
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