What Happens When a CD Reaches Maturity?
Understand your options, timelines, and best strategies for managing a certificate of deposit once it reaches maturity.

A certificate of deposit (CD) can be a useful tool for growing savings at a predictable rate, but the most important decisions often come at the end of the term. When a CD reaches maturity, the fixed term ends and you gain full access to your original deposit plus interest. At that point, you typically have a limited window to decide what to do next before the institution may automatically renew or change how your funds are handled.
This guide explains what CD maturity means, how grace periods work, what happens if you do nothing, and how to choose the best option for your financial goals.
What Is CD Maturity?
The maturity date of a CD is the final day of its agreed term, such as 6 months, 1 year, or 5 years. On that date, the contract you made with the bank or credit union effectively ends, and your principal and any interest earned become available for withdrawal or reinvestment without an early withdrawal penalty.
Until maturity, CDs generally restrict access to your funds. If you withdraw early, you normally pay a penalty equal to a number of days or months of interest. Once the CD matures, those penalties no longer apply, although other rules—such as automatic renewals—can affect how easily you can move your money.
Typical CD Terms and Yields
CD terms vary widely by institution, but common terms include:
- Short-term CDs: 3, 6, 9, or 12 months
- Medium-term CDs: 18, 24, or 36 months
- Long-term CDs: 4 or 5 years, and in some cases longer
Banks often pay higher annual percentage yields (APYs) on longer-term CDs, compensating you for tying up your money for more time. However, rate conditions can change significantly over multi-year terms, which is why the choices you make at maturity matter.
What Happens on the Maturity Date?
On the maturity date, your CD stops being locked under its original contract. Your options usually include:
- Renewing the CD (often automatic if you do nothing)
- Withdrawing some or all of the funds
- Transferring or reinvesting into another account or product
Many banks and credit unions outline in the account agreement exactly what will happen at maturity if you do not provide instructions. A common outcome is an automatic renewal into a new CD of the same term, at the interest rate in effect on the renewal date.
Access to Your Principal and Interest
At maturity, you are entitled to receive:
- The full principal (your original deposit)
- All accrued interest through the end of the term
Some CDs may continue to earn interest after maturity for a limited period, depending on the institution’s policies. Others stop accruing interest immediately upon maturity unless you renew or move the funds into another interest-bearing account.
How You’ll Know When Your CD Is Maturing
For most consumers, the first signal that a CD is about to mature comes from the bank or credit union. For non-renewing CDs with a term longer than one year, federal rules require the institution to send you a written notice before maturity, explaining when the CD will mature and what your post-maturity options are.
Notification Requirements
- Institutions must send a maturity notice before the term ends for certain CDs, especially those longer than one year and that do not renew automatically.
- The notice will typically include the maturity date, whether the CD will roll over automatically, and the length of any grace period.
- You may receive notices by mail, email, secure message, or app notification, depending on your communication preferences.
Best Practices to Track Maturity
- Mark the maturity date on a calendar or digital reminder when you open the CD.
- Confirm your contact information (email, mailing address, phone) is up to date with the bank so you receive all notices.
- Check your online or mobile banking periodically to verify upcoming maturity dates.
Understanding CD Grace Periods
Most CDs offer a grace period after maturity—a short window when you can withdraw, renew, or modify the account without paying an early withdrawal penalty. During this time, you typically have full flexibility to decide what to do next.
Typical Grace Period Lengths
The length of the grace period varies by institution and sometimes by CD term. Common ranges include:
- Approximately 5 to 14 days at many banks and credit unions
- About 7 to 10 days at many large institutions, with some offering a fixed 10-day window
| Institution example | Typical grace period window |
|---|---|
| Many major banks | Around 7–10 days after maturity |
| Online banks (illustrative) | Often 10 days, but policies vary |
| Broad industry range | Typically 5–14 days total |
Always verify your specific CD’s grace period in its disclosures, as missing this window may trigger penalties if you later decide to withdraw funds.
What You Can Do During the Grace Period
Within the grace period, you generally may:
- Withdraw all funds (principal plus interest) without early withdrawal penalties
- Withdraw a portion of the balance and renew the remaining amount
- Change the term length if you roll into a different CD offered by the same institution
- Add funds to the renewed CD if your bank allows additional deposits at renewal
- Move funds to another account at the same institution, such as a savings or money market account
What Happens If You Do Nothing?
If you take no action before the end of the grace period, the bank or credit union will apply the default option described in your CD agreement. There are three common outcomes:
1. Automatic Renewal Into a New CD
The most common default is an automatic renewal, also called a rollover, into a new CD with the same or similar term.
- Your principal—and often your accumulated interest—are locked into a new term.
- The new interest rate will be the current market rate for that CD type, which may be higher or lower than your original rate.
- Once the new term begins, early withdrawals may again incur penalties.
If rates have fallen since you opened the CD, an automatic renewal could lock your funds at a lower yield than you might find elsewhere. Conversely, if rates have risen, renewal may be beneficial—but it is still wise to compare rates at other institutions.
2. Funds Held in the Account
Some institutions may leave your funds in the CD account or transfer them to a different holding account if you do nothing:
- In some cases, the balance may continue earning interest at a specified rate.
- In other cases, the funds could earn little or no interest unless you take action.
This approach gives you ongoing access without early withdrawal penalties, but you risk missing out on better returns.
3. Automatic Distribution of Funds
A less common default is an automatic payout of your CD balance:
- The bank may send a check for the principal plus interest.
- Alternatively, it might transfer the funds to another deposit account you hold at the same institution.
If you prefer to keep funds invested in a CD or other product, you will need to act quickly before or during the grace period to avoid unwanted automatic distribution.
Options When a CD Reaches Maturity
When your CD matures, you have several key options. The right choice depends on your interest rate outlook, liquidity needs, and overall financial plan.
Option 1: Renew the CD
Renewing—either automatically or by choice—keeps your savings in a CD for another term. You may want to renew if:
- You do not need access to the funds in the near future.
- Current CD rates are competitive compared with other low-risk choices.
- You value predictable returns and federally insured deposits.
Before renewing, compare available terms and rates at your institution and others. You may be able to switch from a long-term to a shorter-term CD (or vice versa) depending on your expectations for future rates.
Option 2: Withdraw Your Funds
After maturity and within the grace period, you can usually withdraw your funds without penalties. Reasons to withdraw might include:
- Covering short-term cash needs or major purchases
- Paying down higher-interest debt
- Reallocating into investments with higher return potential and higher risk
Withdrawal is straightforward during the grace period. Once a renewed term starts, however, early withdrawal penalties typically apply again.
Option 3: Move the Money to Another Savings Product
You may choose to move your funds into other deposit accounts, such as:
- High-yield savings accounts for more liquidity and a variable rate
- Money market accounts that may offer check-writing or debit access
These alternatives may be attractive if you want quick access to your money or expect rates to change in the near future, and they are typically insured by the FDIC or NCUA up to applicable limits, similar to CDs.
Option 4: Shop Around for Better CD Rates
If your bank’s renewal rate is low, use the grace period to compare CD rates at other institutions. Factors to weigh include:
- APY relative to national averages
- Term length flexibility
- Minimum deposit requirements
- Early withdrawal penalty structure
Some investors move maturing CDs from traditional banks to online banks or brokerage CDs in search of higher yields, while still remaining in low-risk, interest-bearing products.
Option 5: Build or Adjust a CD Ladder
CD laddering involves spreading your money across multiple CDs with staggered maturities so that a portion of your savings becomes available at regular intervals. When one rung of the ladder matures, you can decide whether to reinvest in another long-term CD or use the funds.
At each maturity date, you can:
- Roll over into a new long-term CD to keep the ladder going
- Shorten or lengthen terms based on interest rate trends
- Take some principal or interest out to meet cash needs
This strategy can help balance liquidity and yield, while reducing the risk of locking all funds at a single rate for a long period.
Consequences of Missing the Grace Period
If you miss the grace period and your CD automatically renews, the account generally returns to being locked until the next maturity date. Accessing funds before then usually means paying an early withdrawal penalty.
Early Withdrawal Penalties After Renewal
Early withdrawal penalties vary by institution and CD term, but often equal a set number of days or months of interest. For example, some banks may charge forfeiture of 60 to 270 days of interest, depending on the term. These penalties can significantly reduce or even eliminate the earnings you would have received on the CD.
To avoid unnecessary penalties:
- Note the grace period dates in advance.
- Contact your bank ahead of maturity with instructions for your CD.
- Confirm any changes or closure have been processed within the grace period.
How to Plan Ahead Before Your CD Matures
Planning before the maturity date can help you make the most of your CD and avoid surprises.
Steps to Take Before Maturity
- Review your contract: Check the original disclosures for the grace period length, renewal policy, and penalty structure.
- Monitor interest rates: Compare current CD, savings, and money market rates as maturity approaches.
- Clarify your goals: Decide whether you will need the funds soon or can afford to lock them up again.
- Give advance instructions: Some banks let you specify before maturity whether to close, renew with changes, or transfer funds when the CD matures.
Coordinating With Your Broader Financial Plan
Your decision at CD maturity should fit within your overall savings and investment strategy. For example:
- Emergency funds are often better kept in highly liquid accounts rather than long-term CDs.
- Long-term goals (such as future tuition or home down payments) may be appropriate for laddered CDs or staggered terms.
- Retirement accounts may use CDs as part of a low-risk allocation alongside bonds and cash equivalents.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q: Do I have to do anything on the exact day my CD matures?
A: Usually not. Most institutions provide a grace period—often around 7 to 10 days—after the maturity date during which you can decide whether to renew, withdraw, or move the funds without paying an early withdrawal penalty.
Q: Will my CD automatically renew at the same interest rate?
A: No. If your CD automatically renews, it typically renews at the current market rate for that term at your bank, which could be higher or lower than your original rate.
Q: Can I withdraw only part of my CD balance at maturity?
A: Many institutions allow partial withdrawals during the grace period while renewing the remainder into a new CD, but policies vary. Check your bank’s terms or contact customer service before the maturity date.
Q: What if I never receive a maturity notice?
A: Banks and credit unions are generally required to send advance notice for certain CDs, especially non-renewing terms longer than one year. However, notices may be missed if your contact information is outdated, so it is best to track the maturity date yourself and verify your details with the institution.
Q: Are my CD funds still insured after maturity?
A: Yes. As long as your funds remain on deposit at an FDIC-insured bank or NCUA-insured credit union and you are within coverage limits, they continue to be protected, whether they are in a CD, checking, savings, or money market account.
References
- What Happens When a Certificate of Deposit (CD) Matures? — Citi. 2024-02-08. https://www.citi.com/banking/personal-banking-guide/basic-finance/what-happens-when-a-cd-matures
- What Should You Do When Your CD Matures? — Synchrony Bank. 2023-08-10. https://www.synchrony.com/blog/bank/what-to-do-when-cd-matures
- What Happens When Your Certificate of Deposit Matures? — Ally Bank. 2023-05-04. https://www.ally.com/stories/save/certificate-of-deposit-cd-maturity-date/
- What Happens When a CD Matures? — PNC Bank Insights. 2023-11-15. https://www.pnc.com/insights/personal-finance/save/what-happens-when-cd-matures.html
- What To Do When a CD Matures — Bankrate. 2024-04-30. https://www.bankrate.com/banking/cds/what-to-do-when-cd-matures/
- What is a Certificate of Deposit (CD) Rollover or Renewal? — Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 2017-01-01. https://www.consumerfinance.gov/ask-cfpb/what-is-a-certificate-of-deposit-cd-rollover-or-renewal-en-923/
- Certificates of Deposit — Charles Schwab. 2024-03-01. https://www.schwab.com/fixed-income/certificates-deposit
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