A GIC ladder is one of the simplest strategies to earn higher interest rates on your savings while maintaining regular access to your money. Instead of locking everything into one GIC, you spread your deposits across multiple maturity dates.
How a GIC ladder works
A basic 5-year GIC ladder divides your total savings into five equal portions, each invested in a different term:
| Rung | Amount | Term | Maturity Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $10,000 | 1 year | March 2027 |
| 2 | $10,000 | 2 years | March 2028 |
| 3 | $10,000 | 3 years | March 2029 |
| 4 | $10,000 | 4 years | March 2030 |
| 5 | $10,000 | 5 years | March 2031 |
When Rung 1 matures in March 2027, you reinvest that $10,000 into a new 5-year GIC (maturing 2032). The following year, Rung 2 matures and you do the same. After the first five years, you always have one GIC maturing annually.
Why GIC laddering beats single-term investing
Higher average rate
Longer-term GICs typically pay higher rates. With laddering, 80% of your money is always in 2–5 year terms earning those higher rates, while you still get annual access to funds.
Regular liquidity
Unlike locking all your money in a 5-year GIC, a ladder gives you access to one-fifth of your savings every year — without paying any early withdrawal penalties.
Interest rate risk protection
If rates fall, most of your money is already locked in at higher rates. If rates rise, you have money maturing soon that you can reinvest at the new, higher rate. The ladder averages out rate fluctuations over time.
GIC ladder example with real rates
Using competitive rates available as of March 2026:
| Term | Rate | Annual Interest on $10,000 |
|---|---|---|
| 1-year GIC | 3.80% | $380 |
| 2-year GIC | 3.90% | $390 |
| 3-year GIC | 4.00% | $400 |
| 4-year GIC | 4.05% | $405 |
| 5-year GIC | 4.10% | $410 |
Total first-year interest on $50,000 ladder: $1,985 (average rate: 3.97%)
If you had put the entire $50,000 into a 1-year GIC at 3.80%, you would earn $1,900. The ladder earns you an extra $85 in the first year, and the advantage grows over time as matured rungs are reinvested at 5-year rates.
How to build your GIC ladder
Step 1: Decide your total amount
Determine how much money you want to invest in GICs. This should be money you do not need for at least a year.
Step 2: Divide into equal portions
Split your total by five (for a 5-rung ladder). If you have $25,000, each rung is $5,000.
Step 3: Buy five GICs with staggered terms
Purchase a 1-year, 2-year, 3-year, 4-year, and 5-year GIC on the same day.
Step 4: Reinvest at maturity
Each year when a GIC matures, reinvest the principal plus interest into a new 5-year GIC.
Step 5: Repeat
Continue reinvesting each maturing GIC into a 5-year term. Your ladder is now self-sustaining.
Mini ladders and variations
Not everyone needs a 5-year ladder. Here are some alternatives:
- 3-rung ladder (1, 2, 3 years): Better for short-term savings goals with more frequent access
- Short-term ladder (90 days, 6 months, 1 year): For money you may need sooner
- Barbell strategy (1-year and 5-year only): Maximizes rate on half your money while keeping the other half liquid
When laddering does not make sense
- You need your money within the next 6 months (use a HISA instead)
- Interest rates are rising rapidly (you may want to stay short-term temporarily)
- The amount is too small for rate differences to matter
Compare current GIC rates
Before building your ladder, compare rates across institutions. Small rate differences matter when compounded over multiple years. Check our best GIC rates page for the latest offers, or use our GIC calculator to project your returns.