CD Calculator
Results
Our Certificate of Deposit Calculator generates 3 primary output metrics for your analysis: the total value at maturity, the total interest earned, and the effective Annual Percentage Yield (APY). Using these outputs, you can make informed decisions before allocating your capital.
Accumulation Schedule
The Accumulation Schedule shows the growth of your investment. It details how the principal and interest grow together over the chosen term length.
What is a Certificate of Deposit?
A Certificate of Deposit (CD) is a time deposit account that pays a fixed interest rate for a specific term length. Customers receive their initial principal plus accumulated interest upon reaching the maturity date, if the funds remain untouched throughout the term.
FDIC-Backed
Your deposit is FDIC-Backed up to the maximum allowable limit of $250,000 per depositor, per institution, per ownership category. This protection is provided by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to guarantee deposit insurance for your savings.
Where and How to Purchase CDs
To purchase CDs, customers can visit local banks, credit unions, or brokerage firms. For example, customers in Westfield, Massachusetts can purchase high-yield certificates directly from Westfield Bank. Alternatively, investors can purchase brokered CDs through online brokerage platforms to access rates from different institutions nationwide.
How to Use CDs
To use CDs effectively, savers match the term of the certificate with specific future financial obligations. This approach ensures that the money becomes accessible exactly when it is needed, without triggering early withdrawal fees.
Withdrawing from a CD
Withdrawing from a CD prior to the maturity date usually incurs a Withdrawal Penalty. This early withdrawal penalty is typically calculated as a set number of months of interest. Upon maturity, banks usually offer a grace period for renewal or withdrawal of the funds.
CD Ladder
A CD Ladder is a strategy of dividing a total deposit across multiple CDs with different maturity dates. For example, you can build a 5-year CD ladder using 5 separate certificates that mature sequentially every year. This laddering strategy provides regular liquidity while securing the higher interest rates of long-term deposits.
CD Ladder Rollover Simulator
Click "Advance 1 Year" to simulate the maturation of the shortest CD and its automatic rollover into a new 5-year CD at the top of the ladder.
Certificate A
Matures in: 1 Year
Certificate B
Matures in: 2 Years
Certificate C
Matures in: 3 Years
Certificate D
Matures in: 4 Years
Certificate E
Matures in: 5 Years
APY vs. APR
The difference between APY and APR is that APR represents the nominal interest rate without compounding, whereas APY reflects the actual annual return including compound interest. In contrast to Simple Interest which only calculates yield on the principal, compound interest calculates interest on both the principal and prior interest. The Annual Percentage Rate (APR) represents the raw rate, while the Annual Percentage Yield (APY) represents the effective yield.
Interactive APY vs APR Calculator
Slide to adjust the interest rate and toggle compounding frequency to see how APR compounds into effective APY.
Compounding Frequency
The Compounding Frequency determines how often interest is calculated and added to the principal balance. More frequent compounding, such as daily compounding, generates a higher yield than monthly or annual compounding.
Compounding Interest Simulator
Simulate compound returns on a $10,000 principal at 5.0% interest over different terms.
Types of CDs
There are 9 primary types of CDs available to depositors, including bump-up, step-up, and add-on. Select a CD type below to explore its specific characteristics:
Liquid CD
A certificate that allows penalty-free withdrawals of a portion of the principal before maturity.
Callable CD
A certificate that the issuing bank can close prior to maturity at its discretion.
Brokered CD
A certificate purchased through a brokerage account rather than directly from a bank.
Jumbo CD
A certificate that requires a large minimum deposit, typically $100,000 or more.
IRA CD
A certificate held within an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) for retirement savings.
Zero-Coupon CD
A certificate purchased at a discount that does not pay periodic interest but pays the full face value at maturity.
Bump-Up CD
A certificate that allows the depositor to request a rate increase if market interest rates rise.
Step-Up CD
A certificate with a pre-scheduled, automatic interest rate increase over the term.
Add-On CD
A certificate that permits additional deposits to the principal balance during the term.
Alternatives to CDs
There are 5 common alternatives to CDs for yield generation, including savings accounts, money market accounts, and treasury bills:
Savings Account
Offers high liquidity but a variable interest rate.
Money Market Account
Offers limited check-writing and a variable rate.
Treasury Bill
A short-term debt obligation backed by the US government.
Bond
A fixed-income security representing a loan to a borrower.
Annuity
A contract that pays out a regular income stream.
Certificate of Deposit Calculator
Use our Certificate of Deposit Calculator to compare different rates and find the optimal path for capital preservation.
Start CalculationFinancial Calculators
There are 17 specialized financial calculators available for certificate of deposit analysis, interest modeling, and investment planning. Each calculator addresses a specific aspect of deposit management and wealth growth.
CD Calculators
CD Calculator
Model returns with compound yields, maturity projections, and accumulation schedules.
Certificate of Deposit Calculator
FDIC coverage tiers, term selection, grace periods, and tax reporting analysis.
CD Interest Calculator
Rule of 72 doubling estimator, daily vs monthly crediting, and accrued interest reporting.
CD APY Calculator
APY frequency breakdown, continuous compounding, and Truth in Savings Act compliance.
CD Return Calculator
Dollar return analysis, opportunity cost modeling, and CD vs savings account comparison.
CD Maturity Calculator
Maturity date planner with grace period windows, auto-renewal tracking, and countdown timer.
CD Ladder Calculator
Custom ladder builder with blended yield, barbell strategy, and bullet strategy analysis.
Early Withdrawal Penalty Calculator
Penalty vs hold analyzer, principal invasion warnings, and penalty-free alternatives.
Interest & Growth Calculators
Compound Interest Calculator
Year-by-year growth table, exponential vs linear comparison, and compounding power analysis.
Simple Interest Calculator
I = P × r × t formula, day-count conventions, and simple vs compound side-by-side comparison.
Future Value Calculator
Multi-horizon projection (5/10/15/20Y), time value of money, and inflation-adjusted future value.
APR Calculator
APR ↔ APY converter, periodic rate conversion, and Truth in Lending Act (TILA) analysis.
APY Calculator
APY earnings simulator (daily/weekly/monthly/annual), Regulation DD, and optimization strategies.
Planning & Analysis
Savings Calculator
Monthly savings goal planner, emergency fund sizing, 50/30/20 budget rule, and account type comparison.
Investment Calculator
Asset class comparator (CDs, bonds, stocks), dollar-cost averaging, and risk-return spectrum.
Inflation Calculator
Future cost projector, CPI analysis, purchasing power erosion, and TIPS/I Bond comparison.
Real Rate of Return Calculator
Fisher equation yield decomposer, tax bracket impact, and after-tax after-inflation analysis.
How These Calculators Work Together
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FAQs
How does a CD calculator work?
A CD calculator works by applying a compounding interest formula to your initial deposit, interest rate, term length, and compounding frequency to calculate total earnings at maturity. The calculator computes the final maturity value using the formula A = P(1 + r/n)nt, where A represents the final balance, P represents the principal deposit, r represents the nominal interest rate, n represents the compounding frequency, and t represents the term in years.
How do I calculate the interest earned on a CD?
To calculate the interest earned on a CD, subtract the initial principal deposit from the final maturity value. For example, if your maturity value is $10,500 on a $10,000 principal deposit, the interest earned is $500.
Can I calculate monthly, quarterly, or annual compounding?
Yes, you can calculate monthly, quarterly, or annual compounding by adjusting the compounding frequency parameter in the calculator. Our calculator supports daily, monthly, quarterly, and annual compounding options to show how compounding frequency increases your yield.
Does the calculator include taxes?
No, the calculator does not include federal or state income taxes in its interest projections. Interest earned on a CD is typically taxed as ordinary income, and tax liabilities must be computed separately based on your tax bracket.
Can I estimate my total earnings at maturity?
Yes, you can estimate your total earnings at maturity by entering your deposit amount, interest rate, term length, and compound frequency into the input fields. The calculator will display the exact final maturity value and total interest earned.