How To Build A T-Bill Ladder 2025 (And Why You Should!)



A T-Bill ladder strategy is the best way to invest in Treasury Bills. By building a bond ladder with your T Bills you give your self …

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36 Comments

  1. Hi Jay thanks a lot for the video however I am still a little bit confused on the t bill ladder.. I am new to investment and would like to ask how to get a broker as you earlier mentioned in the video. Please do you hold consultations or classes?

    Thank you once again

  2. This video is helpful. I decided to do as you did and replicated the 4, 8, and 13-week strategies. I used Treasury Direct. I only used 20 K in each Bill. You state that you take the bill and reinvest it into a 13-week with both the 4 and 8-week bill so you have a maturity date every 5 weeks. I like that. However, during the purchasing process, it asks about re-investing and defaults to a "no." I left it a no. Should I have clicked the yes box to be able to continue to buy after maturity?

  3. Quick question. On a 10k T-Bill at 13 weeks, does the full 10k need to be in the account? Would Treasury still issue T-Bill let’s say if there was $9950. In the account?
    Just a random question I had been thinking about. The Speedmaster is a very nice watch.

  4. I had a ladder of 17 week T-Bills but ended up changing to a ladder of 4 week T-Bills. Using the reinvestment option simplifies management as there is lag time when they are cashed out and then manually reinvested. With my ladder a T-Bill matures every week but is automatically reinvested. If I needed the cash all I have to do change the reinvestment counter to zero. Right now the difference in interest rates for the various term T-Bills is less than 0.1% so switching to T-Bills that pay a bit more isn't worth the trouble. Currently the 13 week have the highest rate. I keep cash in a HSA savings account but the 4 weeks ready access made it comfortable to significantly increase the face amounts.

  5. I have a question. I have 4-week T-bill, it's maturity date is July 9, 2024. I would like to get another 4-week T-bill with the money I used for the first T-bill. There is an isshue date on July 9, the same day the cueernt one I have matures. Do I need to off set buying my next T-bill by a week (July 16) or can I buy the July 9 one? My fear is they will try to take the money from my bank account before they put the mature T-bill money back in first.

  6. Thanks. Makes sense. But the question is .. why not build a ladder using only 4-week T-bills? I understand that new T-bills are issues every week, right? So let's say I buy $ 1000 now of a 4-week T-bill, then next week I buy another $1000 in a new auction, then a 3rd week and then the 4th week. I select auto-re invest for all of them and forget. Wouldn't I have money available every week ? (cancelling the reinvestment option if I need the money).
    I would have Tbills coming to maturity and being reinvested every single week. Why is this not better than buying different term Tbills like you suggest?

  7. IMO ladders work and make sense with a normal yield curve. Normal meaning longer terms pay higher rates. Right now that is not the case. IMO right now you just cycle through 1 month T-Bills until things change. Max rate and max liquidity. Why wouldn't you?

  8. As normal people's bills come due monthly, I was hoping you would talk about creating an income stream using the ladder via combined T-Bill, T-Notes, and T-Bond strategy. To do this I'm always looking at when interest is paid which, if buying previously issued notes, means going into each one to inspect the terms.

  9. I'm building a super aggressive T-Bill ladder. Doing only 4 week T bills. I just started my first one last week invested $5,000. Adding another $2000 today, 2k next and week after that. The plan is to have to the point where I can pull out of at least one T bill at any point. I will be aggressively dumping cash into T bill for the near future. In May putting 8k more and waiting for tax return so I can also put that in. After that I plan on putting an extra 3k a month. Not big on stocks so don't really care to much about them. I'm more looking for short term returns. If I can get 20% or 3% a month that is all I need. I will continue to add 3k a month for the next 10yrs. Super blessed that being an RN allows me to be able to dump so much money in investing. Don't have a bunch of bills so I just have to stay super strict.

  10. Maybe this is a dumb question but — as far as laddering goes shouldn't you just theoretically buy a new 4-month T-Bill literally every single day instead of having them spread out by 4 month intervals (a 4 and an 8 and a 13) so that way you can more quickly put the compound interest to use?

  11. Thank you for this great video! What I don't understand is how do we get to 5% interest on 13 weeks biil? They sell it for $98.67 so how am I getting 5% interest here?

  12. The title says 2024. I don't get it. There is an inverted curve where shorter term maturities currently make more than longer term. So, why would I buy a tBill at 52 weeks when 4 week autoroll tbills are higher. I'd much rather have access to my money every 4 weeks and get a higher rate then a year.

  13. If we invest $10k into this t-bill ladder in December 2023. Is that money still taxable as income for 2023? Or are investments somehow written off? Sorry, but I’m brand new to investing and I’m trying to learn.

  14. Hi there I really love the video. But I have a question, and maybe it is stupid and I just dont understand. Why not just buy 4 week tbills with these rates?

    I have 10k if I did a tbill ladder:
    Week 1 (3) 4 week t bills
    Week 2 (2) 4 week t bills
    Week 3 (3) 4 week t bills
    Week 4 (2) 4 week t bills
    Etc, repeat.
    Does that make sense or is it just dumb? With my calculations every 2 months you’ll be able to add another T bill, then every month, then 2 a month and so on after about 24 months

  15. Thanks for sharing. So I'm confused, from what I see, it looks like the month and other durations provide the same amount of money. So if I buy a 1 year vs a month, am I counting on gaining the interest state plus inflation? If not that, then what is the benefit of locking my money up for a whole year instead of rolling over month to month to use the compounding effect?

  16. Why not just use 100% of your cash to buy every four weeks? The motions are the same, except you don't have to wait 13 weeks to be completely liquid. What is the advantage of locking up 66% of you cash? I don't think the rates are any better on the 8 and 13 week bills. I have searched for this answer and can't find it. So I simply buy T-bills from my brokerage on the secondary market with a 4-6 week maturity and set a calendar event. When mature, I can buy more, or move it elsewhere.

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