CD Interest Calculator 2026 | Certificate of Deposit Earnings – EmergencyFundCalculator.com
Updated April 2026 · FDIC-Insured · APY vs APR Explained

CD Interest Calculator

Calculate Certificate of Deposit earnings with compounding, see your true APY, compare terms from 3 months to 10 years, and model a CD ladder strategy. Free, instant, 100% private.

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CD Interest Calculator
Final balance, total interest, APY, and term comparison
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Your CD details
$
%

Top online banks (Ally, Marcus, Discover, CIT, LendingClub) often offer 4–5%+ APY on CDs in 2026. Check Bankrate CD Rates for today's best rates — they change frequently with Fed policy.

Final Balance at Maturity
$0
Earn $0 in interest — True APY: 0%
Total Interest
$0
Earned on principal
True APY
0%
After compounding effect
Effective Daily Rate
0%
Per-day interest earned
Maturity Date
CD term
Compare Terms at Same Rate
Balance Growth Over Time
Early Withdrawal Penalty Estimator
Save Your CD Plan
~5%
Top 1-year CD APY at online banks in April 2026
$250K
FDIC insurance limit per depositor, per bank, per ownership category
3–12mo
Typical early withdrawal penalty (months of interest forfeited)
Daily
Most common compounding frequency for high-yield online CDs

About This CD Interest Calculator

Built for American savers comparing CDs against HYSAs, T-Bills, and money market funds in 2026.

About the CD Interest Calculator

The EmergencyFundCalculator.com CD Interest Calculator uses the standard compound interest formula to project your exact earnings on a Certificate of Deposit, converts stated APR to true APY (showing the real effect of compounding frequency), and displays an early withdrawal penalty estimator for common timeframes.

The calculator also builds an instant term comparison — showing your earnings at 3 months, 6 months, 1, 2, 3, 5, and 10 years at the same rate — so you can identify the optimal CD term for your goals and liquidity needs.

CDs vs. HYSA in 2026: CDs typically offer higher rates than high-yield savings accounts in exchange for locking your money for a fixed term. If you won't need the funds and want a guaranteed return with zero market risk, a CD is an excellent choice for money above your emergency fund minimum. Use our Emergency Fund Calculator to make sure your emergency fund is fully funded before locking money in a CD.

How CD Interest Is Calculated — The Complete Math

Understanding APY vs APR and how compounding frequency affects your earnings.

The CD Interest Formula

All CD interest calculations use the standard compound interest formula, which is also the basis for FDIC Truth in Savings Act (TISA) disclosures that US banks are required to provide:

Final Balance  =  Principal × (1 + r/n)^(n×t)

Where:
  r = Annual interest rate (APR as decimal)
  n = Compounding periods per year
  t = CD term in years

APY = (1 + r/n)^n − 1  (true annual return with compounding)

Example: $10,000 at 4.75% APR, monthly compounding, 12 months:
  n = 12,  r = 0.0475,  t = 1
  Final Balance = $10,000 × (1 + 0.0475/12)^12 = $10,485.30
  APY = (1 + 0.0475/12)^12 − 1 = 4.853%

APY vs APR — What's the Difference?

Banks are required by the Truth in Savings Act to disclose APY — the actual annual return accounting for compounding. APR is the stated rate before compounding. For a CD compounding monthly at 4.75% APR, the APY is 4.853% — what you actually earn.

APR (Stated)Daily Compounding APYMonthly Compounding APYAnnual Compounding APY
3.00%3.045%3.042%3.000%
4.00%4.081%4.074%4.000%
4.75%4.863%4.853%4.750%
5.00%5.127%5.116%5.000%
5.50%5.654%5.641%5.500%

Always compare CDs using APY, not APR. Two CDs with 5.00% APR but different compounding frequencies have different actual returns. By law, US banks must disclose APY — use that number when comparing offers. This calculator converts APR to true APY automatically.

The CD Ladder Strategy — How to Maximize Returns with Liquidity

The most effective strategy for conservative savers who want higher yields than a savings account while keeping regular access to funds.

What Is a CD Ladder?

A CD ladder splits your total savings into equal portions across multiple CDs with staggered maturity dates. When each CD matures, you reinvest at current rates — giving you regular liquidity and the higher yields of longer-term CDs simultaneously.

Example: $25,000 CD Ladder

$5,000  → 1-Year CD at 4.75%  → Matures April 2027
$5,000  → 2-Year CD at 4.50%  → Matures April 2028
$5,000  → 3-Year CD at 4.30%  → Matures April 2029
$5,000  → 4-Year CD at 4.20%  → Matures April 2030
$5,000  → 5-Year CD at 4.10%  → Matures April 2031

Result: Every 12 months, $5,000 matures → you access cash OR
        reinvest at whatever 5-year CD rates are at that time

CD Ladder Benefits

  • Regular liquidity: With a 5-rung ladder, you have a CD maturing every year — access to funds without early withdrawal penalties.
  • Rate averaging: If rates rise, your maturing CDs roll into higher-rate new CDs. If rates fall, your existing longer-term CDs are locked at higher rates.
  • Extended FDIC coverage: Spreading across multiple banks keeps each institution below the $250K FDIC limit — safe even for large savings balances.
  • Higher average yield: Long-term CDs typically offer higher rates. Laddering captures these higher rates on most of your money while maintaining regular access.

CD Ladder vs. No-Penalty CD: No-penalty CDs allow early withdrawal without fees but offer lower rates. If you value maximum flexibility, no-penalty CDs at HYSA rates may be preferable. Traditional CD ladders are better when you want to maximize yield and have good visibility into your cash needs.

CDs vs. HYSA vs. T-Bills vs. Money Market — 2026 Comparison

Safe Savings Options Compared

ProductTypical 2026 YieldLiquidityFDIC/InsuredBest For
CD (1 year)~4.5–5%Locked (penalty)✓ $250KKnown future expense
HYSA~4–4.75%Instant access✓ $250KEmergency fund, flexible savings
Treasury Bills~4–5%Liquid (secondary market)Gov't backedState tax-exempt income
Money Market Fund~4.5–5%Same-dayNot FDIC (SIPC)Brokerage cash management
Savings Account (big bank)0.5–1%Instant✓ $250KAvoid — use HYSA instead

In 2026, CDs and HYSAs at online banks offer comparable yields — the key difference is liquidity vs. guaranteed rate. CDs lock your rate for the term; HYSAs are variable and can change with Fed policy. If you know you won't need the funds, a CD locks in a guaranteed return. If the rate might drop, locking in with a CD is advantageous.

Early Withdrawal Penalties — What You Need to Know

CD Early Withdrawal Penalties Explained

CDs are fixed-term products — breaking them early triggers a penalty. Penalties are typically expressed as a number of months of interest forfeited:

CD TermTypical PenaltyExample: $10,000 at 4.75% APY
Under 1 year3 months interest~$119 penalty
1–2 years6 months interest~$238 penalty
2–3 years12 months interest~$475 penalty
4–5 years18 months interest~$713 penalty
5+ years24 months interest~$950 penalty

No-Penalty CDs: Several online banks (Ally, Marcus, CIT) offer no-penalty CDs that allow early withdrawal after a short holding period (often 7 days). These typically offer slightly lower rates than standard CDs but give you full flexibility. They're an excellent option if you're uncertain about your liquidity needs.

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CD Calculator FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best CD rates in 2026?

CD rates in 2026 are significantly higher than the near-zero rates of 2021–2022, driven by Federal Reserve rate hikes. Top online banks (Ally, Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Discover, Barclays, CIT, LendingClub) typically offer the highest rates — often 4–5%+ APY on 1-year CDs. Rates change frequently with Fed policy changes. Check Bankrate's daily CD rate tracker or DepositAccounts.com for the current best rates.

What is the difference between APY and APR for CDs?

APR (Annual Percentage Rate) is the simple stated interest rate. APY (Annual Percentage Yield) is the actual return after accounting for compounding — it's always higher than APR when compounding occurs more than once per year. For example, 5% APR compounding monthly = 5.116% APY. By law under the Truth in Savings Act, US banks must disclose APY so you can make accurate comparisons. Always compare CDs using APY, not APR.

Are CDs FDIC insured?

Yes. CDs at FDIC-member banks are insured up to $250,000 per depositor, per ownership category, per bank. CDs at NCUA-member credit unions are similarly insured up to $250,000 per member, per account category. This makes CDs one of the safest investments available — your principal and earned interest are fully guaranteed as long as you stay within insurance limits. To hold more than $250K safely, use multiple banks or multiple ownership categories (individual, joint, IRA).

What is a CD ladder strategy?

A CD ladder splits your savings across multiple CDs with staggered maturity dates — for example, 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5-year CDs each holding 20% of your savings. When each CD matures, you can access the funds penalty-free or reinvest at current rates. This strategy provides regular liquidity, captures higher long-term rates on most of your money, and hedges against rate changes in either direction.

What happens when a CD matures?

When a CD matures, you typically have a 7–10 day grace period to decide what to do: withdraw the funds penalty-free, roll the CD into a new term (often at current rates), or add more funds and renew. If you take no action, most banks will automatically renew at the current rate for the same term. Always check your bank's renewal policy and mark your maturity date — rates at renewal may be significantly different from when you opened the CD.

Is my financial data private?

Yes, completely private. All calculations run in your browser using JavaScript. No data is transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or shared. Your financial numbers never leave your device.

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