Series I Bonds Planning Guide
Why the Rate Structure Matters
Series I savings bonds combine a fixed rate with an inflation rate. The fixed rate stays with the bond. The inflation rate changes every six months. This makes the bond useful when prices rise. It also means projections need clear assumptions.
Using Scenarios
A calculator helps you test those assumptions. You can enter a purchase amount, issue month, valuation month, fixed rate, and inflation rates. You can also add custom six month rates. The result shows estimated value, interest, tax, penalty, and net redemption. It gives a monthly schedule too.
How Interest Builds
The key rule is the composite rate. It blends the fixed rate and the semiannual inflation rate. Interest accrues each month. It compounds every six months. The calculator follows that timing with an estimate. Real redemption values can vary because official tables round values.
Redemption Timing
Holding period matters. Bonds usually cannot be redeemed during the first year. If you redeem before five years, the last three months of interest are lost. The tool estimates that penalty. This makes short holding periods easier to compare.
Tax Impact
Taxes also affect the final result. Interest is usually taxed at the federal level. It is commonly free from state and local income tax. Some education uses may qualify for special treatment. This calculator uses a simple federal tax rate. It should not replace tax advice.
Reading the Chart
Use the chart to see the path of growth. The gross line shows value before tax and penalty. The net line shows estimated redemption value after those items. A wide gap means timing or tax assumptions matter.
Better Planning
The best use is scenario testing. Try a high inflation case. Then try a low inflation case. Compare five year, ten year, and longer holding periods. Review the monthly table before making a decision.
Final Notes
Series I bonds can support emergency savings, tuition planning, or conservative goals. They are not designed for quick trading. They work best when buyers respect the one year lockup, the five year penalty window, and changing inflation cycles. Keep inputs realistic. Inflation can fall fast. A fixed rate can help long holders. A low future rate can still produce value over time. Use results as planning estimates, not guarantees, before final choices.