United States

Ten-year government yield

Yield on ten-year government debt.

Frequencydaily · +1Transformlevel

Source: H10 · RIFLGFCY10_N.B

Stored official data

10-Year Treasury Yield in United States was 4.49% on June 17, 2026, higher by 0.06% (+1.4%) from the prior observation. Charted from daily observations in % yield.

Latest4.49%
MoM+1.35%
YoYN/A
10Y Avg4.48%
Latest observationJune 17, 2026
Model surprise+0.01%

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10-Year Treasury Yield time series chart. Showing observations from Apr 27, 2026 to Jun 17, 2026. Latest value 4.49%.

Min4.35%
Mean4.48%
Max4.67%
Latest observationJune 17, 2026

Source evidence

Tier 1 - critical
Source
Federal Reserve Board Data Download
Native key
RIFLGFCY10_N.B
Freshness
Stored official data
History
Current only
Reuse
Public domain

Research notes

82 · Acceptable
Comparability
3 notes
Quality
3/6 strong
Citation
Retrieved Jun 19, 2026

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Series details, provenance, and revision toolsMetadata, release notes, revision history, and related series.

Series details

CategoryForeign Exchange Rates (H.10)
FrequencyDaily
Unit% yield
Latest observationJune 17, 2026
Platform last fetchJune 19, 2026
Transformslevel, mom
About this series

Ten-year Treasury constant maturity yield from the Federal Reserve Board H.15 release.

The reading right now

As of June 2026, Ten-year government yield for United States stood at 4.49%. That is up 0.06 percentage points from the prior day. Over the trailing five years, the series has averaged 4.48%, ranging from a low of 4.35% in April 2026 to a high of 4.67% in May 2026. The current reading sits 0.01 percentage points above its trailing ten-year mean of 4.48%.

Computed from the observation series on this page. Numbers update when the underlying provider revises the data.

About this indicator

About

The 10-year Treasury yield is the implied annual return an investor would earn holding a U.S. government note to maturity. The U.S. Treasury auctions new 10-year notes in February, May, August, and November, with reopenings of the same security in the off-months. The yield trades continuously in the secondary market and is quoted by Treasury Direct, Bloomberg, and ICE. Macro models treat it as the benchmark long-term safe rate for the dollar economy.

Why it matters

Mortgage rates, corporate bond yields, and the discount rate used in equity valuation all reference the 10-year. The spread between the 10-year and the 3-month or 2-year Treasury has predicted every U.S. recession since 1969 with one false positive (the brief inversion in 1966). Foreign holdings of 10-year notes are a barometer of dollar reserve demand; changes in Japanese, Chinese, or Saudi positioning move the yield curve.

How it's computed

The on-the-run yield refers to the most recently auctioned 10-year note. Daily benchmarks come from the Fed's H.15 release, which is a 4 p.m. ET market quote. The constant maturity Treasury (CMT) yield is interpolated from a yield curve fit to all outstanding Treasuries, which makes it a smoother long-run series than the on-the-run yield. TIPS yields plus breakeven inflation decompose the nominal 10-year into a real rate and an inflation expectation.

Pitfalls

The 10-year yield can fall because growth expectations weakened, because inflation expectations fell, or because the term premium compressed. The three sources have different policy implications. The New York Fed's ACM model decomposes the yield into these three pieces. Treating a 10-year move as a single story is a common analyst error.