CD Laddering Strategy Explained
Key Takeaways
- A CD ladder splits your savings across staggered maturity dates, giving you the higher yields of long-term CDs with the liquidity of having one CD mature every year.
- With the federal funds rate at 3.64% and falling, locking in fixed CD rates above 4% now protects your savings yield from future Fed rate cuts.
- High-yield savings accounts currently offer 4.50-5.00% APY, but those rates are variable and will decline with each rate cut — CDs guarantee your rate for the full term.
- A $25,000 five-rung CD ladder at current rates earns a blended yield of approximately 4.14%, with all deposits FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per bank.
- Keep your emergency fund in a liquid HYSA and use a CD ladder only for money you will not need for at least 12 months.
With the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates steadily through the second half of 2025 and into 2026 — bringing the federal funds rate down from 4.33% to 3.64% as of January 2026 — savers face a dilemma. High-yield savings account (HYSA) rates are falling in lockstep, yet certificates of deposit still offer attractive fixed rates north of 4% for many terms. The question is how to capture those rates without locking up all your cash for years at a time.
The answer, for many savers, is a CD ladder: a simple strategy that spreads your deposits across multiple maturities so you get the benefit of higher long-term rates while maintaining regular access to a portion of your money. It is one of the most time-tested techniques in personal finance, and the current rate environment makes it particularly compelling.
In this guide, we break down exactly what a CD ladder is, why now is an opportune moment to build one, how to construct a ladder step by step with a real-dollar example, how the strategy compares to a standard high-yield savings account, and the most common mistakes to avoid along the way.
What Is a CD Ladder and How Does It Work?
A certificate of deposit (CD) is a time deposit offered by banks and credit unions. You agree to lock your money away for a fixed term — typically ranging from three months to five years — and in return, the bank pays you a guaranteed interest rate that is usually higher than a regular savings account. The trade-off is liquidity: withdraw early and you will typically pay a penalty of several months' worth of interest.
A CD ladder takes this concept and adds flexibility. Instead of putting a lump sum into a single CD, you divide your money across several CDs with staggered maturity dates. For example, you might split $25,000 across five CDs maturing in one, two, three, four, and five years. Each year when one CD matures, you can either spend the proceeds or reinvest into a new five-year CD at the back end of the ladder.
The result is a rolling cycle: you always have a CD maturing within the next 12 months, giving you annual liquidity, while the rest of your money earns the higher rates available on longer-term CDs. Over time, every rung of your ladder holds a five-year CD — the highest-yielding tier — but one matures every single year. It is the best of both worlds: long-term rates and short-term access. For more on this topic, visit our <a href="/savings/">Savings</a> hub.
Why Build a CD Ladder Now? The Rate Environment Favors Locking In
The Federal Reserve held the federal funds rate at 4.33% from February through July 2025 before beginning a series of cuts that brought the rate down to 3.64% by January 2026. Markets widely expect further easing through 2026, with the <a href="/posts/2026-03-01/treasury-yield-curve-what-the-spread-tells-you-now">10-year Treasury</a> yield sitting at 4.02% in February 2026 — a signal that bond investors anticipate rates settling lower over the medium term.
For savers, this trajectory has a direct and unwelcome consequence. High-yield savings accounts, which offered 5.00% or more at the peak, now top out in the 4.50–5.00% APY range and are falling with every Fed cut. Because HYSA rates are variable, your return will continue to decline as the central bank eases policy. A saver who parks $50,000 in a HYSA today could see their effective yield drop by a full percentage point or more over the next 12 to 18 months.
CDs, by contrast, lock in a fixed rate for the entire term. A 1-year CD at 4.50% APY today will still pay 4.50% even if the Fed cuts rates three more times before it matures. Longer-term CDs extend that protection further. Current CD rates remain attractive across the curve:
The mild downward slope in rates from short to long term reflects the market's expectation that rates will be lower in the future — which is precisely why locking in now is valuable. A CD ladder lets you capture today's elevated short-term rates while also securing respectable long-term yields before they erode further.
How to Build a CD Ladder: Step-by-Step With a $25,000 Example
Building a CD ladder is straightforward. Here is a step-by-step walkthrough using a $25,000 lump sum and the rates available in February 2026.
Step 1: Decide on the number of rungs. A five-rung ladder is the most common structure, with CDs maturing every 12 months. You can use fewer rungs (three is popular for shorter time horizons) or more (a 12-month ladder with monthly maturities if you want even more frequent access).
Step 2: Divide your principal equally. Split $25,000 into five equal portions of $5,000 each.
Step 3: Purchase CDs at staggered terms. Using approximate best available rates as of February 2026:
- Rung 1: $5,000 in a 1-year CD at 4.50% APY — earns approximately $225 in interest
- Rung 2: $5,000 in a 2-year CD at 4.25% APY — earns approximately $434 over the full term
- Rung 3: $5,000 in a 3-year CD at 4.00% APY — earns approximately $624 over the full term
- Rung 4: $5,000 in a 4-year CD at 3.95% APY — earns approximately $840 over the full term
- Rung 5: $5,000 in a 5-year CD at 3.90% APY — earns approximately $1,056 over the full term
Step 4: Reinvest each maturing CD. When the 1-year CD matures after 12 months, reinvest that $5,225 into a new 5-year CD at whatever rate is available. Repeat each year as each rung matures. After five years, every position in your ladder will be a 5-year CD — the highest-rate tier — but one matures annually.
Step 5: Maintain the ladder. Each year you face the same decision: reinvest into a new 5-year CD to keep the ladder running, or take the cash if you need it. This is the liquidity advantage — you never have to break a CD early because one is always coming due within 12 months.
Over the first full cycle, this $25,000 ladder would earn a blended yield of roughly 4.14% per year, and every dollar is protected by FDIC insurance up to the $250,000 per-depositor, per-bank limit.
CD Ladder vs. High-Yield Savings Account: Which Wins?
The CD ladder and the <a href="/posts/2026-02-28/high-yield-savings-accounts-explained-how-hysas-work-best-rates-and-how-to-choose-one-in-2026">high-yield savings account</a> are both low-risk savings vehicles, but they serve different purposes and perform differently depending on the rate environment.
Yield comparison. Today, the best HYSAs offer 4.50–5.00% APY — seemingly competitive with or even higher than CD rates. However, HYSA rates are variable and will decline as the Fed continues cutting. A HYSA paying 4.75% today could be paying 3.50% twelve months from now. A 1-year CD at 4.50% will still pay exactly 4.50% regardless. In a falling-rate environment, CDs provide a guaranteed floor.
Liquidity. HYSAs win on pure liquidity: you can withdraw at any time with no penalty. A CD ladder provides structured liquidity — access to one-fifth of your money each year — but breaking a CD early means forfeiting typically three to six months of interest. For true emergency funds, a HYSA or <a href="/posts/2026-02-28/money-market-accounts-vs-savings-accounts-rates-features-and-which-is-right-for-you">money market account</a> remains the better vehicle.
Rate risk. If rates rise unexpectedly, you are locked into lower CD rates while HYSA rates would climb. This is the primary downside of CDs. However, a ladder mitigates this risk because you have a CD maturing every year that you can reinvest at the new, higher rate.
When the CD ladder wins: In a declining-rate environment like the one we are in now, where Fed cuts are expected to continue. Locking in fixed rates above 4% looks increasingly attractive compared to a HYSA that could be yielding 3% or less by late 2026.
When the HYSA wins: If you need instant access to all your funds, or if you believe rates will rise significantly (which is not the current consensus). A HYSA is also the right choice for your <a href="/posts/2026-02-28/how-to-build-an-emergency-fund-step-by-step-guide-to-36-months-of-savings">emergency fund</a> — the money you absolutely cannot afford to have locked up.
The best approach for most savers: Use both. Keep three to six months of expenses in a HYSA for emergencies, and put longer-term savings into a CD ladder to lock in today's rates.
Tips, Pitfalls, and Common Mistakes to Avoid
A CD ladder is simple in concept, but there are several common mistakes that can erode your returns or cause unnecessary headaches.
Do not chase the absolute highest rate at the expense of bank quality. Online banks and credit unions frequently offer the best CD rates, and many are perfectly reputable. But always verify that the institution is FDIC-insured (or NCUA-insured for credit unions) before depositing. The $250,000 FDIC insurance limit applies per depositor, per bank — so if your ladder exceeds that threshold, spread it across multiple institutions.
Understand early withdrawal penalties before you buy. Penalties vary widely. Some banks charge three months of interest for short-term CDs and six to twelve months for longer terms. Others, particularly some online banks, offer no-penalty CDs that let you withdraw after a brief holding period — though these typically pay slightly lower rates. Read the fine print.
Do not put your emergency fund in a CD ladder. The whole point of an emergency fund is immediate access. CD ladders are for money you can afford to set aside for a year or more. Keep your emergency reserves in a high-yield savings account or money market account.
Watch for automatic renewal traps. Most banks will automatically roll a matured CD into a new CD of the same term at whatever the current rate is — which may be much lower. Set calendar reminders for each maturity date so you can make an active decision about reinvestment.
Consider brokered CDs for more flexibility. Brokered CDs, purchased through a brokerage account rather than directly from a bank, can be sold on the secondary market before maturity without a traditional early withdrawal penalty (though you may receive more or less than face value depending on rate movements). They also let you shop across hundreds of banks from a single account.
Do not forget about taxes. CD interest is taxed as ordinary income, not at the lower capital gains rate. If you are in a high tax bracket, consider holding CDs in a tax-advantaged account like an IRA, where the interest can grow tax-deferred.
Conclusion
The CD laddering strategy is not a new invention — it has been a staple of conservative savings plans for decades. But the current rate environment gives it renewed relevance. With the Fed funds rate at 3.64% and expected to decline further, the window to lock in CD rates above 4% is narrowing. Every rate cut makes today's fixed-rate CDs look more attractive in hindsight.
For savers with money beyond their emergency fund that they will not need for at least a year, a five-rung CD ladder offers a compelling balance of yield, safety, and accessibility. It is not the most exciting strategy in personal finance, but it is one of the most reliable — and in an uncertain rate environment, reliability has real value.
The key is to act while rates are still elevated. Build your ladder, set your maturity reminders, and let compound interest do the rest. Your future self, watching HYSA rates tick downward month after month, will appreciate the foresight.
Frequently Asked Questions
Sources & References
fred.stlouisfed.org
fred.stlouisfed.org
www.fdic.gov
Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions.