CD Laddering in 2026: How Cautious Savers Can Balance Yield, Access, and Reinvestment Risk

A CD ladder can help savers lock in competitive rates while keeping regular access to their cash.
CD Laddering in 2026: How Cautious Savers Can Balance Yield, Access, and Reinvestment Risk
CD laddering spreads savings across multiple maturities to balance yield, flexibility, and rate risk. Watchara Ritjan/Shutterstock
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A certificate of deposit (CD) ladder splits your savings across multiple certificates of deposit with different maturity dates. Instead of locking everything into one CD, you stagger when each one matures so part of your money becomes available on a regular schedule. In 2026, with the Federal Reserve’s rate direction still uncertain, CD laddering can help you earn competitive yields insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. (FDIC) while keeping access to cash and reducing the risk of reinvesting all your money at a lower rate.

The CD Question

If you’ve been sitting on cash and wondering whether to put it into a CD, you’re not alone. Certificates of deposit still offer predictable, insured returns that beat most traditional savings accounts. But one of the most common mistakes savers make is locking everything into a single CD at a single rate.

Instead, you might want to consider CD laddering as an alternative to a one-shot CD investment.

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Adam H. Douglas
Adam H. Douglas
Author
Adam H. Douglas is a journalist and writer specializing in personal finance and literature. His recent work explores money management, book reviews, veterinary medicine, and long-term financial planning. He currently resides in Prince Edward Island, Canada, with his wife of 30 years and his dogs and kitties.