Simply opening a single CD and forgetting about it is fine โ but smart investors use proven strategies to get more flexibility, better rates, and higher overall earnings from their certificates of deposit. Whether you're new to CDs or looking to optimize a larger amount of savings, these strategies can make a real difference.
Strategy #1: The CD Ladder
The CD ladder is the most popular CD strategy โ and for good reason. Instead of putting all your money into one CD, you split it into equal portions and invest each in CDs with different maturity dates. As each CD matures, you reinvest it at the longest rung of the ladder.
๐ Example 5-Rung CD Ladder ($25,000 Total)
Every 6 months, a CD matures. You reinvest at the longest term, maintaining the ladder.
Why CD Laddering Works
- Regular liquidity: You always have a CD maturing soon, so you're never fully locked out of your money.
- Rate protection: If rates fall, only part of your money is up for reinvestment. If rates rise, you regularly reinvest at the new higher rates.
- Higher average returns: You earn more than a savings account overall, while maintaining flexibility.
๐ก Quick Start: You don't need a big amount to ladder. Even $5,000 split into five $1,000 CDs with different terms is a valid ladder strategy.
Strategy #2: The Barbell Strategy
The CD Barbell
Split your CD savings into two buckets: short-term and long-term, with nothing in the middle. For example, put 50% in a 6-month CD and 50% in a 3-year CD. This gives you high liquidity from the short-term CD while locking in higher long-term rates on the rest.
The barbell is ideal when:
- You're uncertain whether interest rates will rise or fall
- You want some liquidity soon but also want to lock in current rates
- You want a simple, two-step approach without a complex ladder
Strategy #3: No-Penalty CD as a Savings Account Replacement
No-Penalty CD Strategy
Use a no-penalty CD (also called a liquid CD) as a replacement for your high-yield savings account. No-penalty CDs allow early withdrawal without fees, but often offer rates 0.25%โ0.75% higher than the best savings accounts โ while still locking in your rate against potential cuts.
Best use case: You have money you don't plan to touch but want the option to. A no-penalty CD gives you the safety of liquidity with better-than-savings rates.
Strategy #4: The Rate-Chase Strategy
When interest rates are rising (as in 2022โ2023), locking into a long-term CD locks in a rate that may be surpassed in months. The rate-chase strategy means sticking to shorter-term CDs (3โ6 months) and rolling them over as rates rise, capturing increasingly higher rates.
Short-Term Rolling Strategy
Open 3- or 6-month CDs repeatedly. Each time a CD matures, check if rates have risen and open a new short-term CD at the higher rate. You give up the rate certainty of a longer CD in exchange for the potential to earn more if rates climb.
Strategy #5: IRA CD Strategy (Tax-Advantaged)
One of the most overlooked ways to maximize CD returns: hold CDs inside an IRA. By doing this, CD interest grows tax-deferred (Traditional IRA) or completely tax-free (Roth IRA) rather than being taxed as ordinary income each year.
If you're in a high tax bracket, this can significantly increase your effective after-tax return. Many banks and credit unions offer IRA CDs with the same competitive rates as regular CDs.
How to Choose the Right CD Term
Term selection is one of the most important decisions in any CD strategy. Here's a framework:
| Your Situation | Recommended Term | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Money needed in 3โ6 months | 3โ6 month CD | Preserves access timing |
| General savings boost | 12 months | Best rate/flexibility balance |
| Saving for 2โ3 year goal | 24โ36 months | Locks in rate for goal timeline |
| Retirement reserve | 3โ5 years | Maximizes long-term rate certainty |
| Unsure of timeline | No-penalty CD | Flexibility without sacrifice |
| Rates rising environment | 3โ6 months (rolling) | Captures rate increases |
| Rates falling environment | 2โ5 years | Locks in high current rates |
How to Find the Best CD Rates
The best CD rates are almost always at:
- Online banks: Ally, Marcus, Discover, Synchrony, Bread Financial, CIT Bank
- Credit unions: Often have competitive rates, especially for members
- Community banks: Sometimes run promotions to attract local deposits
Traditional large banks (Chase, Wells Fargo, Bank of America) typically offer much lower CD rates because they don't need to compete as aggressively for deposits. Always compare at least 3โ5 institutions before opening.
Common CD Strategy Mistakes to Avoid
- Opening a CD with your emergency fund โ Never. Keep 3โ6 months of expenses in a liquid savings account.
- Ignoring the grace period โ When your CD matures, you have a 7โ10 day window to act. Missing it means automatic rollover at possibly a lower rate.
- Only checking your current bank โ Your bank's CD rates may be far below what's available elsewhere. Always shop around.
- Choosing the longest term for the highest rate โ A 5-year CD might offer 4.00% while a 1-year CD offers 5.25%. Calculate your actual earnings before assuming longer = better.
- Ignoring taxes โ Factor in your tax bracket when comparing CD returns to ensure the after-tax return still beats alternatives.
Step-by-Step: Building Your First CD Ladder
- Decide your total amount โ e.g., $15,000 you won't need for day-to-day expenses.
- Choose 3โ5 rungs โ e.g., 6-month, 12-month, 18-month, 24-month, 30-month.
- Divide evenly โ $3,000 per rung.
- Open the CDs โ use the same bank for simplicity, or different banks for potentially better rates at each term.
- Mark maturity dates in your calendar with reminders 2 weeks before each.
- Reinvest at maturity โ roll each maturing CD into the longest rung (e.g., 30-month) to maintain the ladder.
Within 6 months, your first CD matures and you have access to $3,000 if needed โ or you reinvest. Every 6 months thereafter, another CD matures. You always have near-term liquidity while earning strong rates on the rest.
๐งฎ Use the Calculator: Before building a ladder, use our CD Calculator to model each rung and see your projected earnings from each CD in the ladder. It makes the strategy concrete and easy to understand.
Final Thoughts
The best CD strategy isn't one-size-fits-all โ it depends on your timeline, risk tolerance, and financial goals. But regardless of your situation, a thoughtful approach using one of these strategies will almost always outperform simply letting money sit idle in a low-rate savings account.
Start simple: even a basic ladder with just three CDs (3-month, 12-month, 24-month) gives you more flexibility and better returns than a single CD or leaving money in savings. Use our free CD Calculator to run the numbers and find the strategy that works best for you.