Free I-Bond calculator. Project your Series I savings bond value with the composite rate formula, semiannual compounding, $10,000 annual limit, and early redemption penalties.
The I-Bond Calculator projects the future value of US Series I Savings Bonds using the Treasury's composite rate formula. Enter the fixed rate, semiannual inflation rate, purchase amount, and holding period to see your projected bond value with semiannual compounding.
I-Bonds are unique because they combine a fixed rate (set at purchase, locked for 30 years) with a variable inflation-adjusted component that changes every 6 months. This calculator models both components using the official composite rate formula, giving you an accurate projection of your bond's growth.
The tool also factors in the $10,000 annual purchase limit for electronic I-Bonds, early redemption rules (no redemption in the first 12 months), and the 3-month interest penalty for redemptions within the first 5 years. I-Bonds offer a unique combination of inflation protection and tax advantages, including the option to defer federal tax until redemption and full exemption from state and local taxes. Understanding the composite rate calculation helps you decide when to buy and how long to hold.
I-Bonds are one of the few investments that guarantee a return above inflation, making them an important tool for preserving purchasing power. However, the composite rate calculation is confusing, the semiannual compounding is non-standard, and early redemption penalties complicate the real return. This calculator handles all that complexity and gives you a clear picture.
Composite rate = fixed rate + (2 × semiannual inflation rate) + (fixed rate × semiannual inflation rate) Bond value = Purchase × (1 + composite rate / 2)^(2t) Early redemption penalty (within 5 years) = last 3 months of interest where t = years held Note: Inflation component resets every 6 months; this calculator assumes a constant rate for projection.
Result: Bond value: $12,334 (Composite rate: 4.28%)
Composite rate = 1.30% + (2 × 1.49%) + (1.30% × 1.49%) = 1.30% + 2.98% + 0.019% = 4.30% (rounded). The $10,000 bond compounds semiannually at 4.30% for 5 years, reaching $12,371. If redeemed at exactly 5 years, no penalty applies. If redeemed at 4 years, the 3-month penalty would cost about $126.
The I-Bond composite rate formula is not a simple sum of fixed and inflation components. The third term (fixed × semiannual inflation) accounts for the interaction between the two rates. At typical rate levels, this third term is small (0.01–0.05%), but it ensures the total return precisely reflects both components compounding together.
I-Bonds serve a unique role: they provide guaranteed purchasing power preservation with zero downside risk. No other investment offers this combination. They are particularly valuable during high-inflation periods, when most bonds lose real value. A common strategy is to maximize I-Bond purchases ($10,000–$15,000/year) as the safe portion of a portfolio, freeing up risk budget for equities.
The $10,000 electronic limit resets each calendar year. A strategic approach is to buy in January to lock in the current rate for the longest possible period before it resets in May or November. Families can multiply the limit: each person (including a trust or business entity) can buy $10,000/year. Over 5 years, a couple could accumulate $100,000 in I-Bonds.
The composite rate combines a fixed rate (set at purchase) and an inflation rate (adjusted every 6 months based on CPI-U). The formula is: composite = fixed + (2 × semiannual inflation) + (fixed × semiannual inflation). The fixed rate never changes; the inflation component can rise or fall.
The composite rate can never go below zero. If deflation occurs, the variable component can be negative, but it is capped so the overall rate does not fall below the fixed rate. Your I-Bond will never lose value — it may just grow very slowly in a deflationary environment.
If you redeem an I-Bond within the first 5 years, you forfeit the last 3 months of interest. After 5 years, there is no penalty. The bond cannot be redeemed at all during the first 12 months. This calculator shows both the full value and penalty-adjusted value.
I-Bond interest is exempt from state and local taxes. Federal tax can be deferred until you cash the bond or it matures at 30 years. If used for qualified education expenses, the interest may also be exempt from federal tax (subject to income limits).
For simplicity, this calculator projects growth using the current composite rate throughout the holding period. In reality, the inflation component changes every 6 months. For a more accurate long-term projection, update the calculator each time new rates are announced (May and November).
I-Bonds are excellent for inflation protection with zero risk of loss. They are ideal for conservative investors, emergency fund supplements, and the bond portion of a portfolio. However, the $10,000 annual limit, 12-month lockup, and lower long-term returns compared to stocks limit their role as a primary growth vehicle.