Time to give CDs a spin? Certificate of deposit interest rates are highest in years

For the kitchen-table investor with a little money to spare, now might be an ideal time to consider investing in a certificate of deposit.

CD rates are as high as they’ve been in years. The best one-year CDs offer 5.66% annual interest, according to a January survey by WalletHub, the personal finance site. The best six-month CDs top out at 5.75%.

“No doubt, CDs are getting more attention these days,” said Chris Starr, head of consumer and business deposits at Wells Fargo Bank.

CDs spook some investors. In a 2023 survey by Forbes Advisor, 41% of Americans said they had never opened one. Some respondents said applying for a CD was “too complicated and time-consuming,” and others didn’t want to lose access to their money.

Certificates of deposit may be unfamiliar to many, but bank officials say the application process is not, in fact, particularly complicated or time-consuming.

“Opening a CD is simple and can be done from your phone or computer in a matter of minutes,” Starr said.

How a certificate of deposit works

When you open a CD, you agree to surrender your money to the bank for a set length of time. In exchange, the bank generally offers you a higher rate of interest than you might get in an ordinary checking or savings account.

The longer the CD’s term, as a rule, the higher the interest rate. Yet, over the past couple of years, the rules have gone out the window. A campaign of aggressive interest-rate hikes by the Federal Reserve sent rates skyrocketing in 2022 and 2023.

Market forecasters expect rates to ease in 2024 and beyond. As a result, somewhat counterintuitively, interest rates are now generally higher on short-term CDs than on long-term ones.

In the WalletHub survey, the top five-year CD offers 4.75% interest. Investors can nab higher rates on CDs with terms ranging from three months to a year.

“We’re in an unusual circumstance right now where the returns for shorter CDs are higher than the returns on longer terms,” said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst for Bankrate. “The expectation is that interest rates are going to come down over the coming years.”

With interest rates at 5% or higher, experts say, the best CDs are competitive with the best high-yield savings accounts, and with bonds.

To open a CD, you must be willing to part with your money

But CDs are not for everyone.

To open a CD, you must be able and willing to part with your money for the full term of the investment. You can withdraw the money early, but then you face penalties that can sap the interest and even some of the principal.

“You have to be able to live without the money for the term of the CD,” McBride said.