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Calculate the value of a paper bond based on the series, denomination, and issue date entered. (To calculate a value, you don't need to enter a serial number. However, if you plan to save an inventory of bonds, you may want to enter serial numbers.)
- Research Center
$10,000 in Series EE bonds, and; $10,000 in Series I bonds....
- My Accounts
Where You Hold Your Securities. You can hold the securities...
- For Teachers
Tools for Teachers. For years, teachers have used Money...
- Research Center
- Current Value
- Past Or Future Value
- Inventory of Bonds
- Things The Calculator Won’T Do
- Warning: Scam
To find the current value of a bond, enter its series, denomination, and issue date, then click "Calculate." (You need not enter the bond’s serial number. But if you’re building an inventory, serial numbers might help you distinguish one bond from another in your list.) To see where the issue date and serial number are found on a bond, see our diag...
To find the value of a bond on a past or future date, enter the date in the "Value as of" field; enter the bond’s series, denomination, and issue date; then click "Update." (Past values are available back to January 1996. Future values are available for remaining months in a bond’s current six-month rate period.)
You can create an inventory of paper bonds and check their values over and over in the future without re-entering information: To createan inventory, enter information about your paper bonds, one bond at a time, into the Calculator. To savean inventory for future use: 1. Click the "Save" button in the results section of the Calculator. This creates...
The Savings Bond Calculator: WILL NOT provide accurate results for the value of electronic bonds. If you hold a bond in electronic form, log in to TreasuryDirect to find the value. WILL NOT verify you own bonds. WILL NOT guarantee the serial number you enter is valid. WILL NOT guarantee a bond is eligible to be cashed. WILL NOT create a savings bon...
Beware of internet scams with a picture of this page claiming you can enter your birth certificate number to access bonds owed to you. Those claims are false, and attempts to defraud the government can be prosecuted. See Birth Certificate Bonds.
Find out what your paper savings bonds are worth with our online Calculator. The Calculator will price paper bonds of these series: EE, E, I, and savings notes. Other features include current interest rate, next accrual date, final maturity date, and year-to-date interest earned.
1 day ago · EE bonds. 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.
Aug 4, 2022 · Series EE bonds are a type of low-risk U.S. savings bond that are guaranteed to double in value after 20 years. Because they are issued by the U.S. Treasury with a 30-year term, they are an...
Mar 9, 2022 · Series EE savings bonds are a unique product issued by the United States government. By investing in them, you are lending money directly to the Treasury Department and will earn a fixed rate of return.
1 day ago · We currently sell 2 types of savings bond: Series EE and Series I. You can buy them for yourself, your child, or as a gift for someone else. This page focuses on buying for yourself or a child whose account is linked to yours.