P
Pulsafi
Updated April 25, 2026

Best CD Rates in New Hampshire

Top APYs around 4.95% on short-term CDs available to New Hampshire residents. New Hampshire has no state income tax — CD interest is taxed only federally.

CD Rate Ladder — New Hampshire

Top-tier online bank averages by term. Local bank rates in New Hampshire typically pay 1-2 percentage points less.

3 month
4.85%
APY
6 month
4.95%
APY
1 year
4.65%
APY
18 month
4.40%
APY
2 year
4.25%
APY
3 year
4.10%
APY
5 year
4.00%
APY

1-Year CD vs T-Bill: After-Tax Yield in New Hampshire

On a $25,000 balance, comparing what you actually keep at the 24% federal bracket.

1-Year CD (4.65% APY)
$883.50
after tax · 3.53% effective
fed: −$279.00
1-Year T-Bill (4.45%)
$845.50
after tax · 3.38% effective
fed: −$267.00 · state: $0 (exempt)
Verdict for New Hampshire: CDs win — New Hampshire has no state income tax, so the T-bill exemption gives no advantage.

Should You Open a CD in New Hampshire?

CDs make sense in New Hampshire when: (1) you don't need the money before the maturity date, (2) you think interest rates will fall during your CD term (locking in protects you), (3) you want a guaranteed yield without market risk, and (4) you've already maxed out tax-advantaged accounts (401(k), Roth IRA, HSA).

CD ladder strategy

Instead of putting all your cash into one CD term, build a CD ladder: split your savings across 3-month, 6-month, 12-month, and 18-month CDs. Every 3 months, one CD matures — you can spend it or roll it into a new long-term CD. This balances liquidity with locked-in rates.

Early withdrawal penalties

Most CDs charge 3-12 months of interest as a penalty for early withdrawal. On a 5-year CD, that's typically 12 months of interest — substantial. Some banks offer "no-penalty" CDs at slightly lower APYs. For emergency fund money, stick with a HYSA (no penalty, fully liquid).

Where to find the best New Hampshire CD rates

Online banks (Marcus by Goldman Sachs, Ally, Capital One 360, Synchrony) consistently offer the highest CD APYs nationwide and are FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per depositor per bank. New Hampshire credit unions sometimes offer "specials" with promo APYs higher than online banks — check NCUA-insured options if you qualify for membership.

Brokered CDs vs bank CDs

Brokered CDs (sold through Fidelity, Schwab, Vanguard) often pay slightly higher rates than direct bank CDs because they cut through aggregator pricing. They're still FDIC-insured up to $250k per issuer, and you can hold them in your IRA. The downside: secondary-market trading is needed for early withdrawal, which can result in capital losses.

New Hampshire CD rate updates
Weekly rate moves, top CD specials, and after-tax yield analysis for your state.
More for New Hampshire savers
Best HYSA in New HampshireEmergency Fund Calculator →Compound Interest Calculator →HYSA Article →