Comparing Interest Rates Across Financial Products: Where to Save and Invest
Different financial products offer different interest rates, reflecting their risk, liquidity, and term. Ranked by typical 2025 rates: checking accounts 0.01-0.10% APY, traditional big-bank savings 0.40-0.50%, high-yield savings 4.0-5.0%, money market accounts 4.5-5.5%, short-term CDs (3-12 months) 4.5-5.3%, long-term CDs (2-5 years) 4.0-4.7%, Treasury bills 4.5-5.0%, Treasury notes/bonds 4.0-4.5%, I Bonds 5.27%, investment-grade corporate bonds 5-7%, high-yield ("junk") bonds 8-12%, dividend stocks 2-4% yield, and REITs 3-5% yield. Higher rates always signal higher risk or lower liquidity—a junk bond paying 10% can default and wipe out your principal, while a government bond paying 4% is essentially risk-free. Compare outcomes on $100,000 over 5 years: $102,020 at 0.40%, $124,618 at 4.5%, $140,255 at 7%, and $161,051 at 10%. Match products to goals: high-yield savings for emergency funds and short-term needs, CDs for known future expenses, and stocks for retirement 20+ years away. No single product is best—the right choice depends on your timeline, risk tolerance, and liquidity needs.