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Home Financial Markets

Series I bond rate is 4.26% through October 2026

April 30, 2026
in Financial Markets
0
Series I bond rate is 4.26% through October 2026


Jetcityimage | Istock | Getty Images

The U.S. Department of the Treasury has announced new rates for Series I bonds. 

Newly purchased I bonds will pay 4.26% annual interest from May 1 through Oct. 31, which is up from the 4.03% yield offered through April 30.

The new rate includes a variable portion of 3.34%, based on inflation data, and a fixed portion of 0.90%. The combined rate is 4.26% after rounding, according to the Treasury. The fixed rate is the same from 0.90% announced in October.

Read more CNBC personal finance coverage

Amid soaring inflation, the I bond rate hit a record high of 9.62% in May 2022, and investors poured into the government-backed, nearly risk-free asset. 

Many shorter-term investors have since redeemed I bonds as rates and inflation have fallen. But the higher fixed rate has remained attractive to some longer-term investors, experts say.

Earlier this year, I bond interest was “lukewarm,” according to David Enna, founder of Tipswatch.com, a website that tracks Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, and I bond rates.

But some investors are watching I bonds again as inflation has ticked higher, he said.

How I bond rates work

I bonds have a variable and fixed rate portion, which the Treasury adjusts every six months, in May and November. Investors receive the combined “composite rate” for a six-month period.   

The variable rate is tied to inflation, and stays the same for six months after your purchase date, regardless of the Treasury’s next update.

By comparison, your fixed rate doesn’t change after purchasing I bonds. The Treasury doesn’t disclose how it calculates fixed-rate adjustments, making it harder to predict.

How the change impacts current I bond investors

If you already own I bonds, there’s a six-month timeline for rate updates, which shifts depending on your original purchase date.

After owning I bonds for six months, the variable yield changes to the next announced rate. But the fixed rate stays the same while you own the asset.

For example, let’s say you purchased I bonds in September. Your variable rate would start at 2.86% and shift to 3.12% in March. Your fixed rate remains at 1.10%. At that point, your new composite rate would be 4.22%.

You can earn I bond interest for up to 30 years, or less if you redeem the assets before that. However, you can’t cash in I bonds for at least one year after purchase. If you redeem within five years, you lose your last three months of interest.

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Editorial Team

Editorial Team

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