Buying savings bonds — TreasuryDirect (2024)

Buying electronic EE or I savings bonds

TreasuryDirect is the official United States government application in which you can buy and keep savings bonds.

Learn about TreasuryDirect Open a TreasuryDirect account

To buy a savings bond in TreasuryDirect:

  1. Go to your TreasuryDirect account.
  2. Choose BuyDirect.
  3. Choose whether you want EE bonds or I bonds, and then click Submit.
  4. Fill out the rest of the information.
  • For information on registration, see Registering your bonds (Who owns them).
  • If you plan to give the bond to someone else, see Giving savings bonds as gifts.

You can buy an electronic savings bond for any amount from $25 to $10,000 to the penny. For example, you could buy an electronic savings bond for $75.38.

In any one calendar year, you may buy up to $10,000 in Series EE electronic savings bonds AND up to $10,000 in Series I electronic savings bonds for yourself as owner of the bonds. That is in addition to the amount you can spend on buying savings bonds for a child or as gifts.

See more about how much can I spend and how much can I own.

Buying through our Payroll Savings Plan

Another way to buy savings bonds is to have your employer send money from each paycheck directly to your TreasuryDirect account.

You decide how much to set aside for savings bonds, then it all happens automatically (like getting the rest of your paycheck to your bank by direct deposit.)

To set up a Payroll Savings Plan

  1. If you don't yet have a TreasuryDirect account, open an account.
  2. Go to your TreasuryDirect account and follow the instructions to set up a Payroll Savings Plan.
  3. Choose the type of savings bonds you want (EE or I) and the amount you want for each bond.
  4. Ask your employer to send money from each paycheck to your TreasuryDirect account.

To have your employer send the money

You will fill out a direct deposit form that needs this information:

  • The "receiving bank name": TREASURYDIRECT (all capitals, no space)
  • The routing number for TreasuryDirect: 051736158
  • Your 10-digit TreasuryDirect account number, no hyphens, with a P at the end
  • (Example: A123456789P)

  • How much money you want to have your employer send from each paycheck
  • Where the form asks if this is a savings account (22) or a checking account (23), you can choose either. That doesn't matter to our system.

Tell your employer that they can send the money to us in any of these 3 ACH file formats:

  • PPD (Prearranged Payment and Deposit)
  • CCD (Corporate Credit or Debit)
  • CTX (Corporate Trade Exchange) – CTX users must submit a TD/CTX Participant Agreement and use the TreasuryDirect CTX File Format.

What happens in TreasuryDirect

The money your employer sends each time goes into a special Payroll Savings Plan Certificate of Indebtedness (C of I) in your TreasuryDirect account. Every time the balance in that specific C of I is large enough to buy the bond you chose at the amount you chose, we issue you that type of savings bond for that amount.

For example: If you want to buy $50 Series I savings bonds and you ask your employer to send $25 from each paycheck to your TreasuryDirect account, we issue a $50 bond for you after every other payday. You don't have to think about it again or do anything else. You keep getting more savings bonds automatically until you change or end your Payroll Savings Plan.

Each savings bond earns interest for you in your TreasuryDirect account until you tell us to cash the bond or until it reaches the end of its 30-year interest-earning life.

Buying paper Series I savings bonds

The only way to get a paper savings bond now is to use your IRS tax refund.

You can buy any amount up to $5,000 in $50 increments.

We may issue multiple bonds to fill your order. The bonds may be of different denominations. We use $50, $100, $200, $500, and $1,000 bonds. Again, the amount of your purchase can be any multiple of $50, from $50 to $5,000. You need to tell us only the amount. We determine denominations.

To buy paper savings bonds, you use IRS Form 8888 to specify how much of your refund should go to savings bonds and how much to you directly (by check or by direct deposit to your bank account).

On Form 8888, you also specify who will own the bonds. That means, you can give paper savings bonds to yourself or to anyone else (as a gift). If you have enough money in your refund, you can buy multiple bonds and, if you wish, you can give them multiple registrations.

You may buy up to $5,000 in paper savings bonds with each year's tax refund.

See more about how much can I spend and how much can I own.

Registering savings bonds (Who owns them?)

Whether you buy an electronic bond or a paper bond, you must specify who owns the bond.

You may name yourself, a child, yourself and someone else (either as another owner or as the beneficiary), or indeed anyone you want to give the savings bond to as a gift.

But the person (or people) you name must meet these conditions:

  • The person must have a Social Security Number.
  • The person must also meet any one of these three conditions:
    • United States citizen, whether the person lives in the U.S. or abroad, or
    • United States resident, or
    • Civilian employee of the United States, no matter where that person lives

You may also register the bond in the name of a trust or estate. An electronic bond in TreasuryDirect also can be in the name of a corporation, partnership, or other entity.

Note: If you are thinking of using the money from savings bonds to pay for your child's college education, do NOT put the bond in the child's name. Keep the bond in your name. See

Using savings bonds for higher education

For more about who owes taxes on savings bond interest, see

Tax information for EE and I bonds

For details on what registrations are allowed and how to register your bonds, see

Registering your savings bonds (Who owns them)

Managing savings bonds for a child under 18

See the note above about using savings bonds for higher education. Whether the bonds are paper or electronic, to use them for college expenses, the bonds must be in an adult's name, not the child's!

But with that exception, you can name the child as the owner of either paper or electronic savings bonds.

Paper savings bonds

If you buy paper savings bonds for your child, you have the responsibility for keeping the bonds.

Electronic savings bonds

If you buy electronic savings bonds for a child, here's how that works:

The child needs a TreasuryDirect account that is linked to the account of a parent or other adult custodian. You (the parent or other adult custodian) may open a TreasuryDirect account for the child. You can then buy savings bonds or other securities, as well as conduct other transactions, for the child. Other people can buy savings bonds for the child as gifts to go into the child's linked account.

See more About linked accounts

Buying savings bonds — TreasuryDirect (2024)

FAQs

How to buy more than $10 000 in I bonds through this loophole? ›

That said, there is a $10,000 limit each year for purchasing them. There are a number of ways around this limit, though, including using your tax refund, having your spouse purchase bonds as well and using a separate legal entity like a trust.

How much is a $100 savings bond worth after 30 years? ›

How to get the most value from your savings bonds
Face ValuePurchase Amount30-Year Value (Purchased May 1990)
$50 Bond$100$207.36
$100 Bond$200$414.72
$500 Bond$400$1,036.80
$1,000 Bond$800$2,073.60

Do savings bonds double every 7 years? ›

Series EE savings bonds are a low-risk way to save money. They earn interest regularly for 30 years (or until you cash them if you do that before 30 years). For EE bonds you buy now, we guarantee that the bond will double in value in 20 years, even if we have to add money at 20 years to make that happen.

Does TreasuryDirect provide statements? ›

The Account Statements will be available on the 1st business day of the month no later than 1pm Eastern Time.

Can married couples buy $20,000 in I bonds? ›

Yes. I bond purchase limits are based on a person's Social Security number. So a married couple can buy up to $30,000 in I bonds annually. Each spouse can buy $10,000 in electronic I bonds and $5,000 in paper I bonds, assuming their federal tax refund is large enough.

Can I buy more than $10,000 in I bonds as gifts? ›

But this cap is per recipient. That means you can buy $10,000 worth of electronic I bonds for yourself and an additional $10,000 for another person. The only way to gift paper I bonds is to purchase them with your tax refund. You can buy up to $5,000 in I bonds per recipient this way.

What will 50000 be worth in 20 years? ›

Assuming an annual return rate of 7%, investing $50,000 for 20 years can lead to a substantial increase in wealth. If you invest the money in a diversified portfolio of stocks, bonds, and other securities, you could potentially earn a return of $159,411.11 after 20 years.

How much is a $50 Patriot bond worth after 20 years? ›

After 20 years, the Patriot Bond is guaranteed to be worth at least face value. So a $50 Patriot Bond, which was bought for $25, will be worth at least $50 after 20 years. It can continue to accrue interest for as many as 10 more years after that.

How long does it take for a $100 EE savings bond to mature? ›

Series EE bonds mature in 20 years but earn interest for up to 30 years. The U.S. Treasury guarantees Series EE bonds will double in value in 20 years.

What are the disadvantages of TreasuryDirect? ›

Securities purchased through TreasuryDirect cannot be sold in the secondary market before they mature. This lack of liquidity could be a disadvantage for investors who may need to access their investment capital before the securities' maturity.

Does TreasuryDirect have fees? ›

TreasuryDirect is free. There are no fees, no matter how much or how little you invest. You may hold both savings bonds and Treasury marketable securities in TreasuryDirect. Your securities in TreasuryDirect are electronic, so you don't have to worry about them getting lost, stolen, or damaged.

Will TreasuryDirect send me a 1099? ›

1099 forms are available by January 31 of each tax year. If you invest in Legacy Treasury Direct, each year you'll receive a 1099 during January (1042-S during March if you're a foreign investor) showing the interest you've earned. If you have registered securities, you'll receive your 1099 through the mail in January.

What is the loophole for series I bonds? ›

Normally, you're limited to purchasing $10,000 per person on electronic Series I bonds per year. However, the government allows those with a federal tax refund to invest up to $5,000 of that refund into paper I bonds. So most investors think their annual investment tops out at $15,000 – one of the key I bond myths.

Can you buy a $5,000 I bond? ›

Is there a maximum amount I can buy? In a calendar year, one Social Security Number or one Employer Identification Number may buy: up to $10,000 in electronic I bonds, and. up to $5,000 in paper I bonds (with your tax refund)

Can I buy $100000 in I bonds? ›

A given Social Security Number or Employer Identification Number can buy up to these amounts in savings bonds each calendar year: $10,000 in electronic EE bonds. $10,000 in electronic I bonds. $5,000 in paper I bonds that you can buy when you file federal tax forms.

How often can I buy a $10000 I bond? ›

There is generally a $10,000 limit per year for purchasing I Bonds, but there are a few ways to get around this limit. For more help working I bonds into your financial strategy, consider working with a financial advisor.

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