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You Are Here: Home » Bank » What is a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?

What is a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?

Published or updated July 16, 2012 by Glen Craig

In today’s difficult economy, it is more important than ever to pay attention to the little details of personal finances.

Money kept in a typical savings accounts will earn very little interest, with many banks today paying as little as one tenth of one percent.

A certificate of deposit (CD) is one alternative that pays a better interest rate than a passbook savings account.

What is a Certificate of Deposit or CD?


A CD is a savings instrument that requires a deposit of a fixed amount of funds for a fixed amount of time in exchange for earning a higher interest rate.

CD’s can be bought with deposits of one thousand dollars or more, for terms ranging from a few months to several years (though you can find lower deposit requirements, $1000 tends to be the average).  Certificates of deposit have early withdrawal fees which can amount to a substantial portion of the interest earned before the withdrawal (each bank has different rules on this).

Savers looking for where to buy the best certificate of deposit should shop for the best CD rates among local banks, or look online for deals on CD’s with higher interest rates (a high yield certificate of deposit).

Current CD rates vary from around one percent to over three percent, depending on size and maturity.  The rate also depends on the current economy.  CD rates tend to move in the same direction as Fed rates.  Purchasers should be sure the issuing bank is a member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.  FDIC insurance covers individual deposits up to $250,000 under current law.

Savers who want flexible use of their savings can build a CD ladder.

In this strategy, a saver with, for example, $5,000 to invest, might buy five $1,000 CD’s, each with a different maturity term — one year, two years, three years, four years, and five years.  At the end of each year, the saver would cash in the CD that just matured and buy a new five year CD.  This way the money stays fully invested, but the saver has access to one fifth of it every year without incurring penalties.

Investing in certificates of deposit is also a great way to help build up your emergency fund.  Since you shouldn’t be spending your emergency fund, having it in a CD allows it to earn more interest.  Should you need the money in an emergency, you can cash in the CD. Yes, there may be penalties, but you would have quick access to the money.

Do you invest in certificates of deposit?  How do you use them?

Filed Under: Bank, Saving Tagged With: cd, certificate of deposit, certificate of deposit rates, high yield certificate of deposit

About Glen Craig

Glen Craig is married and the father to four children that he spends the day chasing as a stay-at-home-dad. He took an interest in personal finance when he realized most of his paycheck was going toward credit card bills. Since then he's eliminated his credit card debt and started on a journey towards financial freedom.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Budgeting on the Fun Stuff says

    March 26, 2010 at 10:52 am

    I’m not invested in CD’s right now since Smarty Pig’s 2.1% is higher than the CD rates I can find. But, I am generally a big fan when the CD rates are a couple of percentage points higher than savings rates.

    • ffb says

      March 26, 2010 at 2:22 pm

      SmartyPig has a great rate now. What I like about CD’s is they take out some of the temptation to spend them since they are locked in. They are good for building discipline.

      • Budgeting in the Fun Stuff says

        March 26, 2010 at 5:44 pm

        Good point…I didn’t take that into account.
        .-= Budgeting in the Fun Stuff´s last blog ..Fit in a Fun Friday – Poker Night =-.

  2. Kevin says

    March 27, 2010 at 12:44 am

    I miss the days in which my ING Cd’s were making 4.25% interest!! Using a CD latter is definitely a good idea, especially for those more timid investors.
    .-= Kevin´s last blog ..Things That Used to be Good but Now Suck =-.

    • ffb says

      March 27, 2010 at 10:41 am

      Yes, I miss those rates too! I should have created a long-term CD ladder years ago and then I would still be enjoying some CD’s with decent rates. That’s why its a good idea to set up a ladder for five years.

  3. Money Funk says

    March 30, 2010 at 3:23 pm

    Ally has a Raise your Rate 2 year CD. Anytime in those two years you have 1 time option to raise your CD to their new rate. Kind of a gamble of sorts. 😉

    I was going to invest in a CD, but my Credit Union is putting out some good rates on their checking/savings accounts.
    .-= Money Funk´s last blog ..Great Giveaways by PF bloggers =-.

    • ffb says

      March 30, 2010 at 3:28 pm

      I’ve seen Ally’s Raise Your Rate CD. It does provide a nice option if rates are expected to go up.

      See if your credit union has good rates on CD’s as well!

  4. Christina says

    April 11, 2010 at 11:49 am

    Nice info, I think this is good for me, instead of money sleeping on the bank, I should try this one. I’m not ready to invest on anything I’m not really sure of, I think to open my idea a little about investing, I should try this firs as a starter.

  5. cheryl says

    May 8, 2015 at 6:20 pm

    my son was given a $50 cd when he was a couple of months old….he is almost eighteen…the problem is , his god mother had the wrong last name on the cd….my son does not have my last name.. and I’ve moved and misplaced it..how do i go about getting the last name fixed so i can give it to him as a graduation present? thank you cheryl

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Glen CraigI'm Glen Craig - I used to live paycheck-to-paycheck, drowning in credit card debt. I turned that all around and now I build wealth rather than debt.

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