What Is the Federal Funds Rate? - NerdWallet (2024)

Updated on Aug. 23.

On Aug. 23, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled that rate cuts are, finally, arriving in September.

“The time has come for policy to adjust,” Powell said at the Kansas City Fed’s annual conference in Wyoming at Jackson Hole. “The direction of travel is clear, and the timing and pace of rate cuts will depend on incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”

The Federal Reserve paused interest rates at 5.25% to 5.50% again at its July meeting. The decision marked one full year since that rate was first set.

What remains unclear is whether or not the Fed will cut rates by 25 basis points or 50 basis points at its meeting scheduled for Sept. 17-18. The futures market’s CME FedWatch Tool now predicts a 63.5% likelihood that the Federal Open Markets Committee will cut the current target rate by 25 basis points; it predicts a 36.5% likelihood of a 50 basis points cut.

Data reports over the next month will guide the Federal Open Markets Committee’s upcoming actions. There are three more meetings scheduled through the end of the year.

» MORE: How is the economy doing?

The current Fed rate is 5.25% to 5.50%. That’s according to the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), the monetary policymaking part of the Federal Reserve that holds eight scheduled meetings a year to set the federal funds rate.

What is the Fed funds rate?

The federal funds rate, or Fed rate, is the interest rate that U.S. banks pay one another to borrow or loan money overnight. It also affects interest rates on everyday consumer products, such as credit cards or mortgages.

Since banks hold reserves to conduct everyday business such as having enough liquidity and clearing payments, banks that need more reserves often borrow money from other banks.

When is the next Fed meeting?

The Federal Open Market Committee's next meeting is Sept. 17-18, 2024. This is the next scheduled time that the FOMC could modify the federal funds rate.

Who sets the Federal funds rate?

The Federal Open Market Committee sets the federal funds rate. The FOMC sets the target rate range, and sets the Fed rate to be aligned with that target range.

What is the current Fed interest rate?

Right now, the Fed interest rate is 5.25% to 5.50%. The FOMC established that rate in late July 2023. At its most recent meeting in July, the committee decided to leave the rate unchanged.

Here are the most recent Fed rates from FOMC meetings:

FOMC meeting dates

Rate change

Fed rate (as a target range)

July 30-31, 2024.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

June 11-12, 2024.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

April 30-May 1, 2024.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

March 19-20, 2024.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

Jan. 30-31, 2024.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

+ Click to see 2023 Fed rate increases

FOMC meeting dates

Rate change

Fed rate (as a target range)

Dec. 12-13, 2023.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

Oct. 31-Nov. 1, 2023.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

Sept. 19-20, 2023.

None.

5.25% - 5.50%.

July 25-26, 2023.

Increase of 25 basis points (or 0.25 percentage point).

5.25% - 5.50%.

June 13-14, 2023.

None.

5.00% - 5.25%.

May 2-3, 2023.

Increase of 25 basis points (or 0.25 percentage point).

5.00% - 5.25%.

March 21-22, 2023.

Increase of 25 basis points (or 0.25 percentage point).

4.75% - 5.00%.

Jan. 31-Feb 1, 2023.

Increase of 25 basis points (or 0.25 percentage point).

4.50% - 4.75%.

+ Click to see 2022 Fed rate increases

FOMC meeting dates

Rate change

Fed rate (as a target range)

Dec. 13-14, 2022.

Increase of 50 basis points (or 0.50 percentage point).

4.25% - 4.50%.

Nov. 1-2, 2022.

Increase of 75 basis points (or 0.75 percentage point).

3.75% - 4.00%.

Sept. 20-21, 2022.

Increase of 75 basis points (or 0.75 percentage point).

3.00% - 3.25%.

July 26-27, 2022.

Increase of 75 basis points (or 0.75 percentage point).

2.25% - 2.50%.

June 14-15, 2022.

Increase of 75 basis points (or 0.75 percentage point).

1.50% - 1.75%.

May 3-4, 2022.

Increase of 50 basis points (or 0.50 percentage point).

0.75% - 1%.

March 15-16, 2022.

Increase of 25 basis points (or 0.25 percentage point).

0.25% - 0.50%.

» RELATED: Learn what basis points are

After sitting at 0% for two years during the coronavirus pandemic, the rate steadily climbed starting in March 2022, as the Federal Reserve aimed to combat inflation. But the climb stopped a year and a half later. The Fed has paused rate hikes eight times since July 2023.

» MORE: Understand how raising interest rates helps inflation

The FOMC meets next on Sept. 17-18, 2024.

What happens when the Fed raises interest rates?

First, some context on Fed rate hikes. The Federal Reserve raises the federal funds rate to curb inflation. When it increases the Fed rate, banks pay more to borrow money from one another. When the federal funds rate rises, it doesn’t just affect banks sending and receiving money. Those banks pass on that expense to customers by charging higher interest rates on products like credit cards and mortgages. The idea is that by increasing the cost of credit, demand for goods and services will fall, causing their prices to subsequently fall, too.

Here’s why that happens: The Federal Reserve can change only the federal funds rate. But since that rate is tied to other rates and variables, those changes have wide-reaching effects. When the Fed rate goes up, it’s more expensive for banks to borrow money. So it gets more expensive for consumers to borrow money, too. Anything tied to financing, including credit cards, car payments, student loans or mortgages, can get pricier.

On the other hand, a rising rate can lead to higher yields for savers and better rates for CD investors in some bank accounts.

» MORE: See our CD rates forecast

What happens when the Fed lowers interest rates?

When the Federal reserve lowers the federal funds rate, banks pay less to borrow money from one another. Banks, in turn, lower interest rates on loans (including mortgages) and credit cards, lowering the cost of borrowing money to buy cars, homes and other big purchases. The stock market is likely to be affected by a lower Fed rate hike, with stock prices growing. All of these factors are intended to induce economic growth. With borrowing costs lowered, consumers have incentive to spend and invest more.

» LEARN: How the Federal Reserve affects mortgage rates

Unfortunately, lower interest rates at banks due to a lower Fed rate means that deposit account interest rates will fall, too. So annual percentage yields on deposit products such as CDs, savings and interest-bearing checking accounts will decline as well.

The Federal reserve paused on changes to the federal funds rate starting in July 2023, keeping rates steady for nearly a year. As such, bank interest rates generally remained flat starting in September 2023 until 2024 when interest rates began to fall. Banks started lowering rates on deposit accounts such as savings and certificates of deposit in anticipation of the Fed rate being lowered, but that has yet to come.

» Are rates going up or down? Check out NerdWallet’s savings forecast

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What Is the Federal Funds Rate? - NerdWallet (1)

How does the Fed raise interest rates?

The Federal Open Market Committee, a 12-member group of banking leaders from around the country, sets the federal funds rate and much of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy. It meets eight times a year and sometimes makes rate changes — including increases or decreases — outside its scheduled meetings.

Here's the FOMC meeting schedule in 2024:

  • Jan. 30-31.

  • March 19-20.

  • April 30 - May 1.

  • June 11-12.

  • July 30-31.

  • Sept. 17-18.

  • Nov. 6-7.

  • Dec. 17-18.

What is the Federal Reserve Board?

The Federal Reserve Board is the umbrella agency that governs the Federal Reserve System. It comprises three groups: the 12 Federal Reserve Banks in the U.S., the Board of Governors and the Federal Open Market Committee.

The Federal Reserve Board is responsible for the Federal Reserve achieving its three Congressional mandates: maintaining maximum employment, steady prices on goods and services, and moderate interest rates throughout the country.

What Is the Federal Funds Rate? - NerdWallet (2024)

FAQs

What Is the Federal Funds Rate? - NerdWallet? ›

Back in March 2022, the Federal Open Markets Committee (FOMC) began to increase the federal funds rate in response to growing inflation. It hiked rates 11 times before finally pausing. The rates, set at 5.25% to 5.50%, haven't budged since July 2023.

What is the Fed's fund rate? ›

Fed Funds Rate
This WeekYear Ago
Fed Funds Rate (Current target rate 5.25-5.50)5.55.5
5 days ago

What is the simple definition of the federal funds rate? ›

The federal funds rate is the target interest rate range set by the Federal Open Market Committee. This is the rate at which commercial banks borrow and lend their excess reserves to each other overnight. The FOMC sets the target federal funds rate eight times a year, based on prevailing economic conditions.

How does the federal funds rate affect me? ›

Fed rate hikes increase your borrowing costs. This affects consumer loans, credit card interest rates, and business financing, which in turn can dampen consumer spending and investment.

What is the Fed prime rate today? ›

Prime rate, federal funds rate, COFI
This WeekMonth Ago
Federal Discount Rate5.55.5
Fed Funds Rate (Current target rate 5.25-5.50)5.55.5
WSJ Prime Rate8.58.5

Is a high fed funds rate good? ›

The Fed raises interest rates to slow the amount of money circulating through the economy and drive down aggregate demand. With higher interest rates, there will be lower demand for goods and services, and the prices for those goods and services should fall.

Will interest rates go down in 2024? ›

No, not unless there's an event such as another global pandemic or economic crisis forcing the Fed to lower rates to 0.00% – 0.25% again. In January 2024, the National Association of REALTOR (NAR)'s Chief Economist Dr. Lawrence Yun famously stated that he doesn't expect rates to fall below 3% again in his lifetime.

What is the highest Fed rate ever recorded? ›

These changes can also indirectly influence long-term interest rates such as those on fixed-rate mortgages and corporate bonds. The highest the federal funds rate has ever soared was to 20% in December 1980.

How to lower federal funds rate? ›

If the Fed wants the federal funds rate to decrease, then it buys government securities from a group of banks. As a result, those banks end up holding fewer securities and more cash reserves, which they then lend out in the federal funds market to other banks.

Why do banks use the federal funds rate? ›

(The federal funds rate is the primary tool to conduct monetary policy and the rate that banks pay for overnight borrowing in the federal funds market.) Banks typically are unwilling to lend to any private counterparty at a rate lower than the rate they can earn on balances maintained at the Fed.

What is the federal funds rate Why does it matter so much? ›

The federal funds rate is one of the Federal Reserve's key tools for guiding U.S. monetary policy. It impacts everything from the annual percentage yields you earn on savings accounts to the rate you pay on credit card balances, which means the fed funds rate effectively dictates the cost of money in the U.S. economy.

Who gets the extra money when interest rates rise? ›

With profit margins that actually expand as rates climb, entities like banks, insurance companies, brokerage firms, and money managers generally benefit from higher interest rates. Central bank monetary policies and the Fed's reserver ratio requirements also impact banking sector performance.

Why do mortgage rates go up when the Fed raises rates? ›

When the Fed makes it more expensive for banks to borrow by targeting a higher federal funds rate, the banks, in turn, pass on the higher costs to their customers. Interest rates on consumer borrowing, including mortgage rates, tend to go up.

What is the highest prime rate in history? ›

What was the highest prime rate? The highest prime rate was 21.5%, reached on December 19, 1980.

What is the difference between federal rate and prime rate? ›

The federal funds rate is the interest rate commercial banks charge each other for overnight lending. Generally, the prime rate is about 3 percent higher than the federal funds rate. That means that when the Fed raises interest rates, the prime rate also goes up.

What is the current Fed rate now? ›

What is the current Fed interest rate? Right now, the Fed interest rate is 5.25% to 5.50%. The FOMC established that rate in late July 2023.

What is the Fed funds rate vs. discount rate? ›

The fed funds rate is the interest rate at which banks lend to one another. The discount rate is the rate at which the central bank lends to banks as a lender of last resort. The Federal Reserve sets both rates.

What is the prime interest rate? ›

The prime interest rate is the percentage that U.S. commercial banks charge their most creditworthy customers for loans. Like all loan rates, the prime interest rate is derived from the federal funds' overnight rate, set by the Federal Reserve at meetings held eight times a year.

What is the current discount rate? ›

Basic Info. US Discount Rate is at 5.50%, compared to 5.50% the previous market day and 5.50% last year. This is higher than the long term average of 2.18%.

What is the overnight rate? ›

The overnight rate is a tool used by the Bank of Canada to set the Prime rate for consumer lenders, and adjust the rate of inflation by making it more expensive or cheaper for consumers and institutions to borrow.

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