Friday’s surprise of a new national leader paying a half a percentage point more than the runner-up CD is still with us, offering an eye-popping rate of 6.50% APY. That offer is from Financial Partners Credit Union on an 8-month term. But beware—it comes with a significant caveat: You can put only up to $5,000 in this special CD.
For deposits larger than that, the nation-leading rate remains 6.00%, available for a take-your-pick term of 12 to 17 months from Credit Human. You also have lots of other stellar options, with almost another dozen CDs paying around 5.75% APY on terms as short as 6 months.
Key Takeaways
- The market-leading rate in our daily ranking of the best nationwide CDs is holding at 6.50% APY, available on an 8-month term but with a maximum deposit of $5,000.
- For a deposit above $5,000, you can earn a top rate of 6.00% APY on a term of your choosing from 12 to 17 months.
- Eleven additional CDs are paying 5.75% or better, on terms starting at 6 months.
- Shoppers in five states can earn 6.25% APY with a top regional CD.
- The Fed is widely expected to hold interest rates steady for the second consecutive time when it meets on Nov. 1, but another rate hike remains possible in December or January.
Below you’ll find featured rates available from our partners, followed by details from our complete ranking of the best CDs available nationwide.
Looking to lock in a great rate for a longer term? The top 2-year CD is paying 5.60% APY, a rate increase that was unveiled last week. If that’s still not long enough, you can secure 5.32% APY for 30 months down the road, or 5.25% APY for 36 or 40 months. All three of those can be found in our daily ranking of the best 3-year CDs.
If you have the option to make a jumbo deposit of at least $100,000, you can boost your 2-year rate to 5.63% APY or your 30-month rate to 5.47% APY.
Note
When asked where they would put an unexpected $10,000 windfall, almost 1 in 5 recently surveyed Investopedia readers said they would choose a CD. Selected by 18% of readers, CDs were the most popular response, outpacing stocks, money market funds, and index funds.