US 1-Month Treasury Bill Rates
US 1-Month Treasury Bill Rates data, recent 12 years (traceable to Oct 02,2014), the yield unit is %, latest yield value is 3.68, updated at Apr 03,2026
Price
Current: 99.71 USD (-0.071 / -0.071%)
Apr 03,2026
Time Range: Oct 02,2014 ~ Apr 03,2026
Average: 99.86 USD
Median: 99.90 USD
Max: 100.00 USD (Mar 26,2020)
Min: 99.55 USD (May 12,2023)
Yield
Current: 3.68 % (+0.023 / +0.629%)
Apr 03,2026
Time Range: Oct 02,2014 ~ Apr 03,2026
Average: 1.94 %
Median: 1.50 %
Max: 5.62 % (May 24,2023)
Min: -0.19 % (Mar 26,2020)
FAQ
Global Government Bond Rates & Historical Data Charts
Track global treasury bond rates with daily historical charts. Access data for US, Germany, Japan, UK, Australia, and China bonds to analyze market trends.
How does the Fed's pause on rate hikes affect 1-month Treasury bill rates?
When the Fed pauses rate hikes, short-term Treasury rates typically decline. 1-month Treasury rates are highly correlated with the federal funds rate, so when the Fed maintains rates, 1-month yields often follow suit, providing lower borrowing costs for investors.
What are the advantages of 1-month Treasuries over money market funds?
1-month Treasuries offer government credit backing with extremely low risk and typically provide higher yields than money market funds. Additionally, Treasury income is exempt from federal taxes, while money market fund income is subject to federal income tax.
Impact of US 1-month Treasury rates on global interest rates?
US 1-month Treasury rates, as the world's most important short-term benchmark rate, directly affect global dollar financing costs. Changes affect 2-month Treasuries, 3-month Treasuries and other short-term rates, and influence global capital flows through dollar exchange rates.
Differences between US 1-month Treasuries and other countries' short-term bonds?
US 1-month Treasuries have higher liquidity and lower credit risk compared to German 2-year bonds and Japanese 2-year bonds. US Treasuries are considered the world's safest investment instruments, while other countries' bond yields typically include sovereign risk premiums.