Bonds have a reputation for being boring. Maybe so. But a smart bond strategy can give you something stocks can't: steady, predictable income with low risk. That's why every smart investor has at least some allocation to fixed income. (It's also one of the cleanest forms of income investing - getting paid by owning assets.)
The most popular bond strategy is called a bond ladder. It's simple, it works, and most beginner investors haven't heard of it.
Bond strategies work over years. Rates, the Fed, and the news that drives them move every day. That's what we cover at Market Briefs - our free daily newsletter that breaks down the biggest market stories every morning. Subscribe free here.
What a Bond Ladder Strategy Actually Is
Imagine you have $50,000 to invest in bonds. Instead of putting it all in one 10-year bond, you spread it out across five.
The ladder looks like this:
- $10,000 in a 1-year Treasury bond
- $10,000 in a 2-year Treasury bond
- $10,000 in a 3-year Treasury bond
- $10,000 in a 4-year Treasury bond
- $10,000 in a 5-year Treasury bond
Every year, one bond matures. When that happens, you take the $10,000 and buy a new 5-year bond at the top of the ladder. That keeps the ladder rolling, with one bond always coming due each year.
Why a Bond Ladder Beats Buying One Bond
Putting all your money in a single bond locks you into one interest rate for years. A ladder solves two problems at once.
First, you're never more than a year away from accessing a chunk of your money without paying a penalty for early withdrawal. If life happens and you need cash, your nearest bond is always close to maturity.
Second, you constantly take advantage of whatever interest rates are doing. If rates rise, you reinvest at higher rates each year. If rates fall, you've already locked in better rates with your longer bonds.
That's why pros call this interest rate risk protection. You're never fully exposed to one rate environment.
Bond Basics Before You Build a Ladder
Before you build a ladder, you need to know a few key bond terms. (For a much wider glossary, our 77+ stock market terms guide is a useful bookmark.)
Yield to Maturity
Yield to maturity is the return an investor gets from owning a bond, expressed as a percentage. When you buy a bond, you're lending money to a government or company, and they pay you interest. The yield is that interest divided by the bond's current price.
Key relationship to remember: bond prices and yields move opposite each other. When bond prices go down, yields go up. When prices go up, yields go down.
Why does this matter? Higher bond yields mean borrowing costs increase for everyone (mortgages, business loans). They also make bonds more attractive compared to stocks. Often, rising yields signal inflation concerns or Fed rate hikes.
Coupon Rate
The coupon rate is the fixed interest rate a bond pays each year, set when the bond is issued. A $1,000 bond with a 5% coupon pays $50 every year until maturity.
The coupon rate never changes. The bond's market price can change, but the actual interest payment is locked in.
Premium vs Discount Bonds
Bond prices move above or below their face value based on interest rate changes.
Imagine you own a bond with a 6% coupon (pays $60/year). If new bonds now pay only 4%, your bond is worth more - it might sell for $1,150 (a premium). If new bonds pay 8%, your bond is worth less - it might sell for $850 (a discount).
That's why understanding the rate environment matters when you're buying bonds.
The Best Bond Types for a Bond Ladder
You can build a ladder with several types of bonds. Each one fits different goals.
Treasury Bonds for Maximum Safety
Treasury bonds are issued by the U.S. government and considered the safest investment in the world. They're backed by the full faith and credit of the United States. (We covered why some investors use them as protection in our breakdown of how Treasuries and TIPS might protect your portfolio.)
You can buy them at TreasuryDirect.gov or through any major brokerage. They come in different flavors based on maturity:
- Treasury Bills (T-Bills): Mature in one year or less
- Treasury Notes: Mature in 2 to 10 years
- Treasury Bonds: Mature in 20 to 30 years
The longer you're willing to lend your money, typically, the higher the interest rate you'll receive.
Corporate Bonds for Higher Yield
Corporate bonds are issued by companies. Maybe Apple needs to build a new factory, or Coca-Cola wants to expand into a new market. Instead of taking a bank loan or issuing new shares, they issue bonds.
Corporate bonds have higher yields than Treasury bonds because there's more risk. Apple is super stable, but it's not quite as bulletproof as the U.S. government. (You can use credit ratings and debt-to-equity checks to size up corporate issuers.)
Corporate bonds are rated by three major agencies: Moody's, S&P, and Fitch. The rating scale goes:
- AAA/Aaa: Highest quality, safest
- AA/Aa, A: High quality, very safe
- BBB/Baa: Medium quality, adequate safety (still investment-grade)
- BB/Ba and below: "Junk bonds" - higher risk, higher return
Stick with investment-grade bonds (BBB or higher) for a bond ladder unless you specifically want to take on more risk.
Municipal Bonds for Tax Advantages
Municipal bonds are issued by state and local governments. Your city might issue bonds to build a new school or repair bridges.
The big advantage: the interest is often exempt from federal taxes, and sometimes state and local taxes too. If you're in a high tax bracket, munis can be incredibly attractive. (For more tax-saving plays, see our list of 11 ways to legally pay less taxes.)
Real example: if you're in the 24% tax bracket and a muni pays 4% tax-free, that's equivalent to earning about 5.26% on a taxable bond.
Certificates of Deposit (CDs) for Low-Risk Income
CDs are like simplified bonds from banks. You give a bank $5,000 for 2 years, they pay you 4.5% interest, and at the end you get your $5,000 back plus interest.
Pros: FDIC-insured up to $250,000 per depositor per bank, fixed returns, no market risk. The value doesn't fluctuate day to day.
Cons: Early withdrawal penalties if you need the money before maturity (typically several months of interest).
You can build a CD ladder using the same approach as a bond ladder - just with CDs from a bank instead of bonds from a government or company. (Some retirees also weigh CDs against annuities, so it's worth comparing.)
How to Build a 5-Year Bond Ladder Step by Step
Here's the simplest version of building a ladder.
Step 1: Decide your starting amount. $50,000 is the example we've been using, but you can start with any amount divisible by 5. Even $5,000 (in $1,000 chunks) works. (How to start investing with $100 or less covers smaller starting points too.)
Step 2: Pick your bond type. Treasuries are safest. Corporates have higher yield. CDs are easiest. Pick one to start.
Step 3: Buy bonds at staggered maturities. Equal amounts at 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 4-year, and 5-year maturities.
Step 4: When the first bond matures, buy a new 5-year. This keeps the ladder rolling. Year after year, you replace the maturing bond with a new long-end bond.
That's it. The ladder is set, and it mostly runs itself - one of the cleanest examples of passive investing you can build.
Adding TIPS to Your Bond Ladder for Inflation Protection
You can add Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) to your ladder for extra protection. TIPS are special Treasury bonds that adjust with inflation. (We dug into this in our piece on how Treasuries and TIPS can protect your portfolio.)
Instead of building all your ladder rungs with regular Treasuries, replace one or two with TIPS:
- $10,000 in a 1-year Treasury
- $10,000 in a 2-year TIPS
- $10,000 in a 3-year Treasury
- $10,000 in a 4-year TIPS
- $10,000 in a 5-year Treasury
This gives you the predictability of regular Treasuries plus the inflation protection of TIPS. Whatever inflation does, part of your ladder is protected.
Two Other Bond Strategies to Know
A bond ladder isn't the only strategy. Two others fit different goals.
The Barbell Strategy
The barbell puts money at both ends of the maturity spectrum, with nothing in the middle. With $50,000:
- $25,000 in very short-term bonds (1-2 years)
- $25,000 in long-term bonds (10-30 years)
The short-term side gives flexibility and quick access to cash. The long-term side locks in higher interest rates. When the short-term bonds mature, you can reassess - do you need the cash, or do you want to extend the long-term position?
The Bullet Strategy
The bullet is the focused approach. You pick a specific date in the future when you'll need money - maybe a down payment in 7 years, or a kid's college start in 10 years. You buy bonds that all mature around that target date.
With $50,000 and a 7-year goal: buy five bonds with face values totaling $50,000, all maturing between years 6 and 8. As you get closer to your target, the money comes due right when you need it.
How Bond Ladders Fit in a Diversified Portfolio
Bonds belong in nearly every portfolio. How much depends on age and goals. (For broader retirement strategy, our guides on retiring a millionaire and what a 401k actually is are good companion reads.)
There's an old rule that says your age should equal your percentage in fixed income. So a 30-year-old would hold 30% bonds and a 60-year-old would hold 60%.
That rule is too simple, but it's a starting point. Younger investors often hold less bond exposure to chase growth. Pre-retirees hold more for stability.
Sample bond ladder allocations by life stage:
- Young investors (20-35): 10-20% fixed income, with bonds as one piece. Focus on growth (often dividend investing or growth stocks).
- Mid-career (35-50): 30-40% fixed income, building bond ladder strength.
- Pre-retirees (50-65): 50-60% fixed income, with TIPS becoming critical.
- Retirees (65+): 60-70% fixed income, focused on income generation and stability.
Build Your First Bond Ladder This Week
Open a TreasuryDirect account or check rates at your brokerage. Decide if a 5-year Treasury ladder fits your goals, then start with whatever amount you can - even small ladders work.
Compare CD rates at multiple banks (Bankrate.com is a good comparison tool). Decide if Treasuries, corporates, munis, or CDs make the most sense for your situation.
Bond ladders are built for decades. Rates and the news that drive them move every day. Subscribe to Market Briefs - our free daily newsletter - to stay on top of it every morning.

