I-Bonds vs TIPS: Which Inflation-Protected Investment Is Better in 2026?

Both I-Bonds and TIPS protect against inflation. But they work completely differently — and one is clearly better depending on your situation.

I was surprised by some of these findings when I first dug into the research.

How Each Works

I-Bonds: Purchased directly from TreasuryDirect.gov. Rate = fixed rate + inflation rate (CPI-U), adjusted every 6 months. Cannot sell for 12 months; 3-month interest penalty if sold before 5 years.

TIPS: Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities. Traded on the open market (or via ETFs like TIP, VTIP). Principal adjusts with CPI. Pay semi-annual coupon on the adjusted principal.

Head-to-Head Comparison

Factor I-Bonds TIPS
Purchase limit $10,000/year per person Unlimited
Liquidity 1-year lockup, 5-year penalty Sell anytime on market
Tax treatment State tax exempt; federal deferred State tax exempt; phantom tax issue
Deflation protection Never goes below purchase price Par value guaranteed at maturity only
2026 rate (approx) 3.1% composite Real yield ~2.0%
Best for Emergency fund, small savers Large portfolios, retirees

The TIPS “Phantom Tax” Problem

TIPS adjust your principal upward with inflation — but the IRS taxes that adjustment as income, even though you haven’t received it. This creates a tax bill on money you haven’t actually received. Solution: hold TIPS in tax-advantaged accounts (IRA, 401k).

My take: the research points in a clear direction here.

Does this match your experience?

The Decision Framework

  • Under $10K to invest: I-Bonds (guaranteed, no market risk)
  • Over $10K and need liquidity: TIPS ETF (VTIP for short-term, TIP for broad)
  • Emergency fund replacement: I-Bonds (after 12 months, better than savings accounts)
  • Retirement portfolio allocation: TIPS in IRA (avoids phantom tax)
  • Maximum protection: Both — $10K in I-Bonds + TIPS for the rest

Investment disclaimer: This is educational content. Consult a financial advisor for personalized advice.

Published by

Rational Growth Editorial Team

Evidence-based content creators covering health, psychology, investing, and education. Writing from Seoul, South Korea.

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