Investing in CDs is straightforward: choose a bank, pick a term, open an account, and deposit your money. You earn a fixed interest rate for the full term — no market risk, no volatility. At maturity you receive your original deposit plus all interest earned.

This guide covers where to buy CDs, how to pick the right term, a five-rung ladder example, and how CD interest is taxed.

See the full CD Guide 2026 for current rates and tools.

Step-by-Step: How to Invest in a CD

Step 1 — Decide How Much to Invest

Determine how much money you can set aside without needing access before the CD matures. CDs are poor choices for emergency funds — that money belongs in a liquid high-yield savings account.

A practical split: keep 3–6 months of expenses in a HYSA, then invest any remaining surplus in CDs.

Step 2 — Choose Where to Buy

Where to Buy Pros Cons
Online bank Highest rates, no minimums, FDIC insured No in-person banking
Traditional bank/credit union In-person service, branch access Much lower rates
Brokerage (brokered CD) Secondary-market liquidity Slightly lower rate, price risk

For most people: online banks win. Top options in 2026 include Ally Bank, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Bread Savings, Synchrony Bank, and Discover. For current top picks, see best CD rates 2026.

Step 3 — Choose Your Term

The term you choose should match when you will need the money:

Timeline Suggested CD Term
Less than 6 months 3-month CD or no-penalty CD
6–12 months 6-month or 12-month CD
1–2 years 12-month or 18-month CD
2–3 years 24-month CD
3–5 years 36–60 month CD or CD ladder
More than 5 years CD ladder + broader investment portfolio

In a falling-rate environment (2026 outlook), longer terms lock in today’s higher rates. The CD rate forecast 2026 covers where rates are expected to move.

Step 4 — Open Your CD Account

Most online banks let you open a CD entirely online in under 10 minutes:

  1. Go to the bank’s website and select “CDs” or “Certificates of Deposit”
  2. Choose your term and review the APY
  3. Enter your personal information (name, SSN, address, date of birth)
  4. Provide your funding source — a linked checking or savings account
  5. Review and confirm your deposit

You will receive confirmation by email. The CD start date is typically the business day after funding clears.

Step 5 — Fund the CD

Most banks transfer funds via ACH from your linked account. Funding takes 1–3 business days. The rate is locked at the time of account opening, not when funds arrive.

Important: Standard CDs are closed to additional deposits. Once opened, the balance is fixed for the term.

Step 6 — Track Your Maturity Date

Set a calendar reminder 2 weeks before your CD matures. At maturity you will have a grace period (typically 7–10 days) to:

  • Withdraw and spend or invest elsewhere
  • Reinvest in a new CD at the current rate
  • Transfer to a savings account

Most banks auto-renew CDs if you miss the grace period. The new rate may be lower than your original rate. See what to do when your CD matures.

CD Laddering: The Optimal Strategy for Most Investors

Instead of putting all your money in one CD, a CD ladder staggers maturities so you always have a CD coming due and access to the highest long-term rates.

Classic 5-Rung CD Ladder Example

Total investment: $25,000 (split into five $5,000 CDs)

Rung CD Term APY Matures Interest Earned
1 12 months 4.75% May 2027 $237
2 24 months 4.50% May 2028 $461
3 36 months 4.25% May 2029 $662
4 48 months 4.10% May 2030 $880
5 60 months 4.00% May 2031 $1,083

Total interest: $3,323 over five years

When Rung 1 matures in May 2027, you reinvest that $5,237 into a new 5-year CD at whatever rate is available then. Every year afterward, you have a CD maturing — giving you annual liquidity — while the 5-year rungs earn the highest rates.

For the complete laddering methodology, see CD laddering strategy 2026.

Where to Buy CDs: Banks, Credit Unions, and Brokerages

Online Banks

Online banks offer the highest CD rates because they have lower overhead than branch-based banks. Current top rates at online banks: 4.25–4.75% APY for 12-month CDs.

Minimum deposits are often $0 — you can open an Ally CD with $1.

Traditional Banks and Credit Unions

Big four banks (Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, Citibank) typically offer CD rates of 0.01–1.00% APY — a fraction of what online banks pay. Credit unions offer share certificates with competitive rates and NCUA insurance identical in coverage to FDIC.

Brokered CDs

Brokered CDs are sold through brokerage platforms (Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard). They can be sold on the secondary market before maturity without the bank’s early withdrawal penalty — though the price may be above or below face value. Best for investors who want CD-like safety inside a brokerage account. The SEC has published investor guidance on brokered CDs.

How CD Interest Is Taxed

CD interest is taxable as ordinary income — the same rate as your paycheck, not the lower capital gains rate.

Key rules:

  • Taxed in the year credited to your account, even if you don’t withdraw
  • Bank issues Form 1099-INT each January for the prior year’s interest
  • CDs spanning two years create tax liability in both years
  • Interest above $1,500 requires Schedule B on your tax return

Tax-advantaged alternative: Hold CDs inside a traditional IRA (taxes deferred until withdrawal) or Roth IRA (qualified withdrawals tax-free). See IRA vs CD 2026.

Common CD Investing Mistakes

Mistake What to Do Instead
Locking emergency fund in a CD Keep 3–6 months expenses in a liquid HYSA
Choosing the longest term without rate research Compare rate by term — sometimes 12-month beats 5-year
Ignoring early withdrawal penalties Match term to your timeline or use no-penalty CDs
Auto-renewing without checking rates Set maturity calendar alert; compare rates at renewal
Exceeding FDIC limits at one bank Spread deposits across multiple banks if over $250,000
Buying from a big-four bank without comparing Online banks pay 4–10x more

FDIC and NCUA Protection

All standard CDs at FDIC-member banks are insured up to $250,000 per depositor per bank per ownership category. Married couples can hold up to $500,000 at a single bank in joint ownership. To insure more, spread funds across multiple banks.

Credit union share certificates are covered by NCUA insurance with identical limits.

For balances over $250,000, use the FDIC’s BankFind suite to confirm a bank’s insurance status before opening.

Are CDs Worth It in 2026?

At 4.25–4.75% APY, CDs make sense as a guaranteed-return component of a savings strategy. They outperform traditional savings accounts by 10–20x and lock in rates before the Fed cuts further. They are not a replacement for equity investments — but they are the right tool for money you need in 1–5 years with zero tolerance for loss.

For a full verdict: are CDs worth it in 2026?

WealthVieu
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