Free CD ladder calculator. Build a certificate of deposit ladder strategy with staggered maturities to balance higher rates with regular liquidity access.
The CD Ladder Calculator helps you build a staggered certificate of deposit strategy that balances higher long-term rates with regular access to your money. Distribute your total investment across multiple CDs with different maturity dates and see the blended yield, total interest earned, and your liquidity schedule.
A CD ladder works by splitting your investment into equal portions and investing each in CDs with staggered terms. For example, with $50,000, you might put $10,000 each into 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 4-year, and 5-year CDs. Each year, one CD matures, giving you access to funds without paying early withdrawal penalties.
This strategy captures the higher rates offered by longer-term CDs while ensuring you always have a CD maturing within the next year. As each CD matures, you can reinvest it into a new long-term CD or use the funds as needed. A well-designed ladder gives you the best of both worlds: the higher yields of longer-term CDs and the regular access to funds that shorter terms provide. This strategy is especially valuable in rising-rate environments.
Putting all your money in one CD forces a choice between a high rate (long term) and liquidity (short term). A CD ladder solves this by giving you both. You earn a blended rate that is higher than short-term CDs alone, while still having regular access to portions of your money as CDs mature throughout the year.
Per rung: FV = (Total / N) × (1 + APY)^term Rung Interest = FV – (Total / N) Blended Yield = (Total Interest / Total Investment) / Weighted Avg Term × 100 where N = number of rungs
Result: Total interest: $7,364 | Blended yield: 4.73%
Splitting $50,000 into five $10,000 CDs with staggered terms from 1 to 5 years and rates from 4.5% to 5.0% earns a total of $7,364 in interest. The blended annualized yield across all rungs is approximately 4.73%. The 1-year CD matures first with $450 in interest, while the 5-year CD earns the most at $2,763.
Start by deciding the total amount and number of rungs. For a simple 3-rung ladder with $30,000, invest $10,000 each in 1-year, 2-year, and 3-year CDs. After the first year, the 1-year CD matures and you reinvest it in a new 3-year CD. Each subsequent year, one CD matures and is reinvested, keeping the rolling structure intact.
The power of a CD ladder comes from consistent reinvestment. When a rung matures, reinvesting into the longest term available maintains the higher blended yield. If rates have risen, your new CD captures the better rate. If rates have fallen, your existing longer-term CDs are already locked at the old, higher rates, partially buffering the decline.
You do not need multi-year terms to benefit from laddering. A mini-ladder using 3-month, 6-month, and 9-month CDs gives quarterly access while earning more than a savings account. This is ideal for money you might need within a year but want to earn a bit more on while it sits.
A CD ladder is an investment strategy where you divide your money among multiple CDs with staggered maturity dates. As each CD matures, you can reinvest it or use the funds. This approach gives you regular access to your money while capturing higher rates from longer-term CDs.
Most people use 3 to 5 rungs. Three rungs offer simplicity with decent rate improvement, while five rungs provide annual access with maximum rate optimization. More than five rungs increases complexity with diminishing marginal benefit. Choose based on your need for access frequency.
A CD ladder provides more flexibility. One 5-year CD earns the highest rate but locks all your money for 5 years. A 5-rung ladder earns a slightly lower blended rate but gives you access to 20% of your money each year without penalties. The liquidity advantage usually outweighs the small rate difference.
When a CD in your ladder matures, you have two main options: reinvest in a new CD at the longest term to maintain the ladder, or withdraw the funds for other needs. Most laddering strategies call for reinvesting to keep the structure intact, but the flexibility to withdraw is a key benefit.
When rates are falling, longer-term CDs lock in today's higher rates before they drop. A CD ladder built during a falling rate environment lets you capture good rates on your longer rungs. However, as shorter CDs mature and are reinvested, they will renew at lower rates.
A CD ladder can serve as part of an emergency fund strategy, but keep at least 1–2 months of expenses in a liquid savings account for immediate needs. The CD ladder can hold the remaining 4–10 months, with regular maturities providing scheduled access. This approach earns more interest than keeping everything in savings.