Treasury Bonds vs CDs — Which Is the Better Choice in 2026?
Comparing Treasury bonds with certificates of deposit — yields, safety, liquidity, and taxes. Find out which offers a better deal for your money.
Treasury Bonds or CDs — The Classic Safe-Money Dilemma
This is one of the most common questions from people looking for a safe home for their savings. Both instruments guarantee your principal back, but they differ in yield, liquidity, tax treatment, and flexibility.
In this comparison, we'll analyze every key factor to help you make the right choice in 2026.
Quick Comparison
| Feature | Treasury Securities | Certificates of Deposit |
|---|---|---|
| Yield | 4.0–4.8% (varies by type) | 3.5–5.0% (varies by bank/term) |
| Safety | U.S. government (unlimited) | FDIC up to $250,000 |
| Taxes | Federal only (no state/local) | Federal + state + local |
| Minimum | $25–$100 | $500–$10,000 (varies) |
| Early withdrawal | Sell on market or small penalty | Often severe penalty (months of interest) |
| Interest payments | Semi-annual (notes/bonds) or at maturity | Monthly, quarterly, or at maturity |
| Availability | TreasuryDirect, any brokerage | Your bank only |
Yields — Who Wins?
Treasury Securities (January 2026)
- 13-Week T-Bill: ~4.4%
- 26-Week T-Bill: ~4.5%
- 1-Year T-Bill: ~4.4%
- 2-Year T-Note: ~4.2%
- 5-Year T-Note: ~4.2%
CDs (January 2026)
- 6-Month CD (best): up to 4.8%
- 1-Year CD (standard): 3.5–4.5%
- 1-Year CD (promotional): up to 5.0% (new customers)
- 5-Year CD: 3.5–4.0%
- Big bank CDs: 2.0–3.5%
Headline verdict: CDs can sometimes offer higher nominal rates, especially promotional offers. But once you factor in state taxes, Treasuries often come out ahead.
After-tax comparison (24% federal + 6% state bracket)
| Investment | Gross Yield | Federal Tax | State Tax | After-Tax Yield |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1-Year T-Bill (4.4%) | 4.4% | 1.06% | 0% | 3.34% |
| 1-Year CD (4.5%) | 4.5% | 1.08% | 0.27% | 3.15% |
Even though the CD pays 0.1% more nominally, the T-Bill wins after taxes thanks to the state tax exemption.
Liquidity — Where's the Flexibility?
Treasury Securities
- Marketable Treasuries: sell anytime on the secondary market through your brokerage
- Price may be above or below par depending on rate changes
- Settlement: next business day
- No penalty — you just accept the market price
CDs
- Early withdrawal penalty: typically 3-12 months of interest
- Some CDs are non-breakable — you literally cannot withdraw early
- No-penalty CDs exist but offer lower rates
- Brokered CDs can be sold on secondary market (price risk, similar to bonds)
Example: $50,000 locked in a 1-year CD, you need money after 6 months:
- Typical penalty: 6 months of interest = ~$1,125 (at 4.5%)
- You earned 6 months of interest: ~$1,125
- Net gain after penalty: $0 — you break even at best
Same scenario with T-Bills (via brokerage):
- Sell your remaining T-Bill on the market
- You keep all interest accrued so far
- Possible small gain or loss depending on rate movements
Verdict: Treasuries are clearly more flexible. CDs can trap your money with harsh penalties.
Safety — Is There a Difference?
Treasury Securities
- Guarantee: Full faith and credit of the United States
- Limit: None — whether you have $1,000 or $10 million, it's all guaranteed
- Track record: The U.S. has never defaulted on its debt
CDs
- Guarantee: FDIC insurance up to $250,000 per depositor per bank
- Beyond $250K: uninsured (spread across banks to stay covered)
- Bank failures happen: SVB, Signature Bank, First Republic — all in 2023
Verdict: Treasuries are safer, especially for large amounts. For under $250K, both are very safe.
When to Choose Treasuries
- You live in a high-tax state — California, New York, New Jersey — the state tax exemption makes a real difference
- You might need the money early — selling a T-Bill is far less painful than breaking a CD
- You have more than $250,000 — exceeds FDIC limits at one bank
- You want inflation protection — I Bonds adjust with CPI; CDs don't
- You want to build a bond ladder — Treasuries are easy to ladder with weekly auctions
When to Choose CDs
- You found an exceptional promotional rate — some banks offer above-market rates to attract new deposits
- You want monthly interest payments — many CDs pay monthly; Treasuries pay semi-annually or at maturity
- You need simplicity — one bank, one product, no secondary market
- You're a loyal bank customer — relationship rates can be competitive
- You want zero price risk — even if you break a CD early, you always get at least the principal
Combining Both — A Smart Strategy
You don't have to choose one or the other:
- 50% in Treasuries — state tax advantage + liquidity + inflation protection (I Bonds)
- 30% in CDs — lock in a great promotional rate for diversification
- 20% in HYSA — instant-access emergency fund
Concrete Example — $50,000 for 12 Months
Investor in 24% federal + 8% state tax bracket:
1-Year T-Bill (4.4%)
- Gross interest: $2,200
- Federal tax: $528
- State tax: $0
- Net interest: $1,672
- After-tax yield: 3.34%
1-Year CD (4.5%)
- Gross interest: $2,250
- Federal tax: $540
- State tax: $180
- Net interest: $1,530
- After-tax yield: 3.06%
Difference: $142 more from the T-Bill — despite the CD's higher nominal rate.
Inflation and Long-Term Strategy
Here, Treasuries have a major edge:
- I Bonds adjust with inflation — if prices rise 5%, your rate rises accordingly
- TIPS provide inflation protection in marketable form
- CDs have fixed rates — if inflation spikes, your real return can go negative
For anything beyond a 1-2 year horizon, inflation-protected Treasuries are the only guaranteed way to preserve purchasing power.
Tracking Investments with Freenance
Whether you choose Treasuries, CDs, or both, it's important to track everything in one place.
Freenance automatically:
- Tracks your CDs and Treasury holdings in a unified dashboard
- Monitors maturity dates and upcoming reinvestment decisions
- Compares real after-tax returns across all your safe investments
- Shows your actual yield after inflation
- Reminds you of maturity dates so you can reinvest promptly
Make better financial decisions with a complete picture of your portfolio.
Summary — Treasuries vs CDs
In 2026, Treasury securities win in most categories:
✅ Higher after-tax yields (state tax exemption) ✅ Better liquidity (sell anytime vs. early withdrawal penalties) ✅ Inflation protection available (I Bonds, TIPS) ✅ Unlimited government guarantee
CDs still make sense in specific situations — exceptional promotional rates, monthly income needs, or preference for maximum simplicity.
Recommendation: For most investors, Treasury securities are a better choice than standard CDs. Start with a T-Bill ladder or I Bonds, and only use CDs when you find a rate that clearly beats Treasuries after adjusting for state taxes.
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