I bond rate: November 2009 - April 2010
Series I savings bond · issue period 2009-11
A Series I savings bond issued November 2009 - April 2010 earns a composite rate of 3.36% for its first six-month interest period. This is the 0.30% fixed rate — locked in for the life of the bond — combined with the 1.53% semiannual inflation rate set for this period. After the first six months the bond moves on to later inflation rates; only the fixed rate stays constant.
Source: TreasuryDirect. Data as of May 2026.
Rate breakdown for November 2009 - April 2010
| Component | Value |
|---|---|
| Fixed rate (for life of the bond) | 0.30% |
| Semiannual inflation rate (this period) | 1.53% |
| Composite rate (new bond, first 6 months) | 3.36% |
| Annualized inflation component | 3.06% |
Source: TreasuryDirect Series I rate chart. Data as of May 2026.
How the composite rate is computed
The Treasury composite-rate formula, applied to this period:
0.30% + (2 x 1.53%) + (0.30% x 1.53%) = 3.36%
The composite rate is floored at 0%, so a Series I bond never loses nominal value even when the inflation component is negative. The fixed rate of 0.30% applies for the bond’s full 30-year life. Try the composite-rate calculator to vary the inputs.
Neighboring periods
- Newer: May 2010 - October 2010 — 1.74% composite
- Older: May 2009 - October 2009 — 0.00% composite
- See all I bond rate periods or the full composite history.
Frequently asked questions
What is the I bond rate for November 2009 - April 2010?
Series I bonds issued November 2009 - April 2010 earn a composite rate of 3.36% for their first six months. That is a 0.30% fixed rate (which stays for the life of the bond) combined with a 1.53% semiannual inflation rate.
What is the fixed rate on a November 2009 - April 2010 I bond?
The fixed rate is 0.30%. The fixed rate never changes for the 30-year life of an I bond, so a bond bought in this period always carries a 0.30% fixed component on top of whatever inflation rate is in effect.
How is the 3.36% composite rate calculated?
Using the Treasury formula: 0.30% + (2 x 1.53%) + (0.30% x 1.53%) = 3.36%. The result is floored at 0%, so an I bond can never lose nominal value.
Estimate your bond’s value
Own a bond from this period? Use the I bond value calculator to estimate what it is worth today, including the 3-month early-redemption penalty if you have held it less than five years. For the exact penny value, use TreasuryDirect’s official calculator.
Not investment or tax advice. BondValue is an independent reference, not affiliated with the U.S. Treasury or TreasuryDirect. Savings bond rates reset every 6 months (on May 1 and November 1), and any value shown here is an estimate. Verify current rates and the exact penny value of your bonds at TreasuryDirect’s official Savings Bond Calculator. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
Last updated: 2026-06-21