A savings bond is a bond sold by the U.S. Treasury to raise money for its operations. It is non-transferable, meaning it cannot be sold on the market to other investors. Savings bond can only be bought from, and sold to, the U.S. Treasury. Savings bond is issued in denominations of $50 to $10,000, and matures in 20 or 30 years, although the bond buyer can redeem the bond earlier than that. Savings bond comes in three forms:
- I bond -- An inflation-indexed US savings bond that is given a new interest rate semiannually
- EE bond -- Sold for half its face value and redeemed at full face value
- HH bond -- Acquired only as an exchange of the EE bond.
A savings bond can be used as an investment program and also as part of a special savings program via payroll deductions.







