Bond Duration Calculator
Measure your bond's sensitivity to interest rate changes. Calculate Macaulay and Modified Duration to better manage fixed-income portfolio risk.
Results
Enter values and click Calculate to see results
How to Use This Bond Duration Calculator
Enter the bond details
Input the face value (par value), coupon rate, years to maturity, and yield to maturity. Most corporate bonds have a $1,000 face value.
Select the coupon frequency
Choose how often the bond pays interest. Most U.S. bonds pay semi-annually (twice per year), but some pay quarterly or annually.
Review the duration results
The calculator shows Macaulay Duration (weighted average time to receive cash flows) and Modified Duration (price sensitivity to interest rate changes).
Bond Duration Reference Guide
| Bond Type | Typical Duration | Interest Rate Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Treasury Bills | < 1 year | Very Low |
| Short-Term Bonds | 1-3 years | Low |
| Intermediate Bonds | 3-7 years | Moderate |
| Long-Term Bonds | 7-15 years | High |
| 30-Year Treasury | 15-20 years | Very High |
Duration is always less than or equal to maturity for coupon-paying bonds. Zero-coupon bonds have duration equal to maturity.
Understanding Bond Duration
What Is Macaulay Duration?
Macaulay Duration measures the weighted average time until you receive all cash flows from a bond. It accounts for both coupon payments and the return of principal at maturity. A 10-year bond with a 5% coupon might have a Macaulay Duration of around 8 years because you receive some money back before maturity through coupon payments.
What Is Modified Duration?
Modified Duration shows how much a bond's price will change for a 1% change in interest rates. If a bond has a Modified Duration of 5 years, its price will drop approximately 5% if rates rise by 1%, and rise approximately 5% if rates fall by 1%. This makes it a direct measure of interest rate risk.
Why Duration Matters for Investors
Duration helps you compare bonds with different maturities and coupons. Two 10-year bonds can have very different durations depending on their coupon rates. Higher coupon bonds have lower duration because you get more money back sooner. This matters when interest rates are expected to rise — lower duration bonds lose less value.
Duration vs. Maturity
Maturity is simply when the bond expires. Duration is more nuanced — it factors in when you actually receive cash. A zero-coupon bond has duration equal to maturity. A high-coupon bond has duration significantly shorter than maturity. For most coupon bonds, duration runs about 70-80% of maturity.
Tips for Using Duration in Portfolio Management
Match Duration to Your Time Horizon
If you need money in 5 years, consider bonds with duration around 5 years. This reduces the risk that rate changes will hurt your principal when you need to sell.
Use Duration to Gauge Rate Risk
When rates are expected to rise, shorten portfolio duration. When rates are expected to fall, extend duration to capture more price appreciation.
Consider Convexity for Large Rate Moves
Duration is a linear approximation. For large rate changes, convexity matters too. Bonds with higher convexity gain more when rates fall than they lose when rates rise.
Diversify Across Durations
A bond ladder with varying maturities gives you a blend of durations. This provides income stability while limiting exposure to any single rate environment.