![]() ![]() Nothing contained on this Website constitutes tax, accounting, regulatory, legal, insurance or investment advice. YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT BY ACCESSING OUR WEBSITE AFTER WE HAVE POSTED CHANGES TO THESE TERMS, YOU ARE AGREEING TO THESE TERMS AS MODIFIED. SUCH CHANGES SHALL BE EFFECTIVE IMMEDIATELY UPON POSTING. WE SUGGEST THAT YOU REVIEW THESE TERMS PERIODICALLY FOR CHANGES. AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES (COLLECTIVELY, “BLACKROCK”) RESERVE THE RIGHT TO CHANGE, MODIFY, ADD OR REMOVE PORTIONS OF THESE TERMS AT ANY TIME FOR ANY REASON. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO ALL OF THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THIS AGREEMENT, YOU ARE NOT AN AUTHORIZED USER OF THESE SERVICES AND YOU SHOULD NOT USE THIS WEBSITE.īLACKROCK, INC. ![]() BY UTILIZING THE WEBSITE LOCATED AT ("WEBSITE"), YOU ACKNOWLEDGE THAT YOU HAVE READ THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND THAT YOU AGREE TO BE BOUND BY THEM. ![]() up to $5,000 in paper I bonds (with your tax refund)įor individual accounts, the limits apply to the Social Security Number of the first-named in the registration.READ THESE TERMS AND CONDITIONS ("TERMS") CAREFULLY BEFORE USING THE SERVICES DESCRIBED HEREIN.up to $10,000 in electronic I bonds, and.In a calendar year, one Social Security Number or one Employer Identification Number may buy: For example, you could buy an I bond for $36.73. Tax information for EE and I savings bondsĮlectronic I bonds: $25 minimum or any amount above that to the penny. If you use the money for qualified higher education expenses, you may not have to pay tax on the earnings. You choose whether to report each year's earnings or wait to report all the earnings when you get the money for the bond. To see what your paper Series I bond is worth, use our Savings Bond Calculator.įederal estate, gift, and excise taxes state estate or inheritance taxes: Yes If you have a Series I electronic bond, you can see what it is worth in your TreasuryDirect account. How do I find the value of my Series I savings bond? See Cash in (redeem) an EE or I savings bond. For example, if you cash in the bond after 18 months, you get the first 15 months of interest. However, if you cash in the bond in less than 5 years, you lose the last 3 months of interest. You can cash in (redeem) your I bond after 12 months. Paper I bonds: You must submit the paper bond to cash it. With a Series I savings bond, you wait to get all the money until you cash in the bond.Įlectronic I bonds: We pay automatically when the bond matures (if you haven’t cashed it before then). Separate tables for fixed rates, inflation rates, combined ratesģ0 years (unless you cash it before then).Matrix showing fixed rates, inflation rates, and combined rates together (PDF).We list interest rates for all I bonds ever issued in 2 ways: Thus, your bond's value grows both because it earns interest and because the principal value gets bigger. The new principal is the sum of the prior principal and the interest earned in the previous 6 months. Interest is compounded semiannually, meaning that every 6 months we apply the bond’s interest rate to a new principal value. You can buy paper I bonds with your IRS tax refund. ![]() You can buy electronic I bonds in your TreasuryDirect account. ![]()
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