A CD ladder is a savings strategy that gives you the high interest rates of long-term CDs while keeping a portion of your money accessible every year. In a high-rate environment — or when rates are uncertain — it’s one of the most reliable, low-risk tools available. Here’s how it works.
What Is a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?
A CD is a savings account with a fixed term and a fixed interest rate. You deposit money, agree to leave it untouched for the term (typically 3 months to 5 years), and earn a guaranteed rate. If you withdraw early, you pay a penalty — usually a few months of interest.
CDs are FDIC-insured up to $250,000, so there’s essentially zero risk of loss for amounts within that limit.
In 2026, 1-year CD rates at top online banks range from 4.5–5.0% APY. 5-year CDs may offer slightly higher or lower rates depending on the yield curve.
The Problem With a Single Long-Term CD
If you put all your savings into a single 5-year CD, you earn the maximum rate — but your money is locked up for five years. If rates rise, you’re stuck with the old rate. If you need the money early, you pay a penalty.
What Is a CD Ladder?
A CD ladder splits your savings across multiple CDs with different maturity dates. As each CD matures, you reinvest the proceeds into a new long-term CD. The result: you have money coming available regularly, and you’re always reinvesting at current rates.
How to Build a Classic 5-Year CD Ladder
Say you have $25,000 to invest. You split it into five equal $5,000 portions:
- $5,000 → 1-year CD
- $5,000 → 2-year CD
- $5,000 → 3-year CD
- $5,000 → 4-year CD
- $5,000 → 5-year CD
At the end of year 1, your 1-year CD matures. You roll that $5,000 (plus interest) into a new 5-year CD. Repeat every year.
After 5 years, you have five 5-year CDs maturing in consecutive years. You’re earning 5-year rates while getting liquidity every 12 months.
Short-Term CD Ladders: Monthly or Quarterly
You can also build shorter ladders for more frequent access:
- 3-month ladder: 1-month, 2-month, 3-month CDs → money available every month
- 1-year ladder: 3-month, 6-month, 9-month, 12-month CDs → quarterly liquidity
Short-term ladders are useful for money you’ll need in the next 12–18 months but want to keep earning more than a savings account rate.
Current CD Rates in 2026
The Fed’s rate cycle matters here. As of mid-2026, the yield curve for CDs looks something like this (example ranges, not guaranteed):
- 3-month: 4.3–4.6% APY
- 6-month: 4.5–4.8% APY
- 1-year: 4.5–5.0% APY
- 2-year: 4.3–4.7% APY
- 5-year: 4.0–4.5% APY
Check Bankrate, NerdWallet, or individual bank sites for current rates before building your ladder — rates change regularly.
CD Ladder vs. High-Yield Savings Account
Both are safe, FDIC-insured options. The key difference:
- HYSAs offer variable rates that adjust with the Fed. If rates drop, your savings rate drops.
- CDs lock in a rate for the full term. If rates drop after you open a CD, your rate stays fixed.
In a rate-cutting environment, CDs offer protection. In a rate-rising environment, a ladder captures the upside through periodic reinvestment. Many savers hold both — HYSAs for their emergency fund, CD ladders for medium-term savings.
Where to Open CDs
Online banks and credit unions consistently offer higher rates than traditional banks:
- Ally Bank — no minimum deposit, broad term options
- Marcus by Goldman Sachs — competitive rates, no penalty CD option
- Discover Bank — strong rates, good customer service
- Bread Financial — frequently top-rated for rates
Your local credit union is also worth checking — they often compete with online banks on rates while offering in-person service.
No-Penalty CDs: A Middle Ground
Some banks offer no-penalty CDs that let you withdraw early without a fee. Rates are typically slightly lower than standard CDs but higher than HYSAs. These are ideal if you want a locked rate but aren’t 100% sure you won’t need the money early.
The Bottom Line
A CD ladder is a simple, reliable strategy for earning more on money you don’t need immediately while maintaining regular access to your funds. It eliminates interest rate risk, keeps you liquid on a rolling schedule, and requires minimal maintenance once built. If you have savings sitting in a low-yield account, a CD ladder is worth serious consideration.