1. What Is a CD Ladder?
A CD ladder is a savings strategy where you spread money across multiple Certificates of Deposit with different maturity dates — for example, $10,000 each in 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 4-year, and 5-year CDs. Each CD is one "rung" of the ladder.
The genius of the strategy is that it solves a fundamental tension in CD investing:
- Longer-term CDs pay higher rates — but lock up your money for years.
- Short-term CDs preserve liquidity — but offer lower rates.
A CD ladder gives you both: the higher rates of longer-term CDs and regular access to cash as each rung matures. Once the ladder is fully established, one CD matures every year (or every quarter, depending on your ladder design), giving you a consistent window to access funds or reinvest.
2. Why CD Ladders Work in 2026
The 2026 rate environment makes CD laddering particularly attractive. After the Federal Reserve's aggressive rate hikes from 2022–2023, CD rates reached their highest levels in over 15 years. Rates have since moderated but remain historically competitive — with 1-year CDs averaging around 4.0% and 5-year CDs reaching 5.0% APY at the most competitive institutions.
Two risks face any CD investor in this environment:
- Rate risk: If you lock all your money in long-term CDs and rates rise further, you miss out on higher yields until maturity.
- Liquidity risk: If you keep everything in short-term CDs or savings accounts, you may miss the higher yields on longer terms.
A CD ladder hedges both risks simultaneously. You are never fully exposed to rate changes in one direction, and you always have money maturing on a predictable schedule. Whatever the rate environment does, your ladder adapts over time as each rung matures and gets reinvested.
3. Step-by-Step: Building Your First CD Ladder
Decide how much you want in the ladder. This should be money you do not need immediately — your emergency fund should remain in a HYSA, not CDs. Common ladder sizes range from $10,000 to $500,000+.
Most ladders use 3, 4, or 5 rungs. Fewer rungs means simpler management but less frequent access. More rungs (up to 5) give you annual maturity windows and broader rate diversification across terms.
Split your total investment equally across each rung. For $50,000 with 5 rungs, that is $10,000 per CD. Equal weighting is the simplest approach; you can weight toward longer or shorter terms based on your outlook.
Open each CD at the chosen term (1yr, 2yr, 3yr, 4yr, 5yr). Shop rates across multiple FDIC-insured banks. Online banks typically offer the highest rates. Keep each bank's balance within FDIC limits.
When the 1-year CD matures, reinvest it at the longest term (5 years). Now you have four CDs with 1, 2, 3, 4 years remaining, and a new 5-year CD. Each year, the process repeats — maintaining the ladder indefinitely.
4. Example: $50,000 CD Ladder with 5 Rungs
Here is how a $50,000 ladder built in May 2026 would look, using competitive but realistic APYs available at top-rated online banks:
| Rung | Term | Amount | APY | Maturity Value | Maturity Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1-Year | $10,000 | 4.0% | $10,406 | May 2027 |
| 2 | 2-Year | $10,000 | 4.3% | $10,878 | May 2028 |
| 3 | 3-Year | $10,000 | 4.6% | $11,446 | May 2029 |
| 4 | 4-Year | $10,000 | 4.8% | $12,083 | May 2030 |
| 5 | 5-Year | $10,000 | 5.0% | $12,763 | May 2031 |
| Total | $50,000 | 4.54% avg | $57,576 | — | |
Total earnings: $7,576 in interest over the ladder's life. Average blended APY of 4.54% — better than most savings account rates, with predictable annual access to $10,000+ beginning in May 2027.
5. CD Ladder vs. Keeping Money in a Savings Account
| Factor | CD Ladder | High-Yield Savings (HYSA) |
|---|---|---|
| Current Rate (May 2026) | 4.0%–5.0% APY (by term) | ~4.5–5.0% APY |
| Rate stability | Locked in at open | Variable — can drop anytime |
| Liquidity | Annual (at each maturity) | Immediate, any time |
| Early withdrawal | Penalty applies | No penalty |
| FDIC insured | Yes (up to $250K/bank) | Yes (up to $250K/bank) |
| Best for | Money you won't need for 1+ years | Emergency fund, near-term cash needs |
In practice, the best strategy is to use both: keep 3–6 months of expenses in a HYSA for emergencies and true liquidity, then ladder the rest of your savings you won't need for at least a year. This gives you the rate protection of CDs without sacrificing your safety net.
6. Risks and Considerations
- Early withdrawal penalties. If you need funds before a CD matures, most banks charge a penalty of 60–180 days of interest (or more on longer terms). This can erode your returns or even reduce principal on short-held CDs. Plan your ladder around your actual cash flow needs.
- Rising rate environment. When rates rise after you lock in a CD, you miss out on higher yields until maturity. The ladder mitigates this because a new rung matures every year for reinvestment at current rates.
- Falling rate environment. When rates drop, your existing locked-in CDs are protected — you continue earning your original rate while new money earns less. This is actually an advantage of locking in longer terms.
- Inflation risk. On longer-term CDs, if inflation significantly exceeds your CD rate, your real return (after inflation) is negative. In 2026 with inflation moderating, this risk is lower than in 2022, but remains worth monitoring on 4- and 5-year CDs.
7. When CD Ladders Don't Make Sense
- You need all your funds within 6 months. If you might need the money soon, keep it in a HYSA. Early withdrawal penalties make short-lived CDs potentially costly.
- You are actively investing in equities with higher expected returns. Over long time horizons, diversified stock investments have historically outperformed CDs significantly. CDs make the most sense for the "safe" portion of a balanced portfolio — money you cannot afford to risk in markets.
- Your HYSA covers all liquid needs adequately. If your savings account already earns a competitive rate and you have full liquidity, a CD ladder adds complexity without necessarily adding much return, especially if rates are similar across terms.
8. Advanced CD Ladder Strategies
Barbell Strategy
Instead of spreading evenly across all terms, put money only in very short-term (3–6 months) and very long-term (4–5 year) CDs. The short-term CDs provide frequent liquidity; the long-term CDs capture the highest yields. The middle terms are skipped. This works well when the yield curve is steeply upward-sloping — meaning 5-year rates are much higher than 1-year rates.
Using Different Banks for Each Rung
By opening each CD rung at a different FDIC-insured bank, you can maximize FDIC coverage while also shopping for the best rate at each term length. Bank A might offer the best 1-year rate; Bank B the best 3-year rate. This takes more setup but can optimize both safety and returns.
Brokered CDs
Brokered CDs are CDs purchased through a brokerage account (like Fidelity or Schwab) rather than directly from a bank. They are typically FDIC-insured and can offer competitive rates. A key advantage: brokered CDs can often be sold on the secondary market before maturity without paying an early withdrawal penalty (though the price may reflect current interest rates, creating market risk). They are ideal for more sophisticated CD ladder implementations.
Use our interactive CD Ladder Calculator to model your exact ladder — custom amounts, terms, and APYs.
Open CD Ladder CalculatorFrequently Asked Questions
For educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Consult a qualified financial advisor.