3 month
3.69%
Treasury
US Treasury Rates
Monitor the US yield curve across maturities, spot inversions quickly, and compare recent changes in basis points.
Last updated
2026-05-29
Curve status
Normal curve
Based on the 10Y minus 2Y spread.
Data source
Local rates table
No FMP data API calls on page load.
History points
6 755
Used for the interactive chart.
10 year
4.45%
30 year
4.99%
10Y - 2Y curve
+47 bp
History
Treasury rate history
Yield curve
Local database
Latest Treasury rates
| Maturity | Rate | 1 day | 7 days | 30 days |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 month | 3.72% | 0 bp | +7 bp | +4 bp |
| 2 month | 3.71% | 0 bp | +6 bp | -1 bp |
| 3 month | 3.69% | 0 bp | +4 bp | +1 bp |
| 6 month | 3.78% | -1 bp | +3 bp | +5 bp |
| 1 year | 3.79% | -1 bp | 0 bp | +4 bp |
| 2 year | 3.98% | -1 bp | -6 bp | +6 bp |
| 3 year | 4.06% | -1 bp | -5 bp | +12 bp |
| 5 year | 4.13% | -2 bp | -9 bp | +8 bp |
| 7 year | 4.27% | -2 bp | -12 bp | +4 bp |
| 10 year | 4.45% | 0 bp | -12 bp | +3 bp |
| 20 year | 4.98% | 0 bp | -12 bp | +1 bp |
| 30 year | 4.99% | +1 bp | -12 bp | +1 bp |
How to read Treasury rates
Treasury yields show what investors demand to lend to the US government over different maturities. Higher yields usually mean tighter financing conditions.
The yield curve compares short-term and long-term rates. A normal curve slopes upward, while an inverted curve means shorter maturities yield more than longer maturities.