Treasury dashboard

Read the U.S. Treasury curve in one reliable surface.

This page stays narrow on purpose: official benchmark yields, clean comparison, curve context, and direct links to deeper explainers.

Official source: U.S. Treasury daily par yield curve
Read Treasury guides

Last updated

Jun 3, 2026

live

Data is loaded at runtime from the Treasury feed with a local fallback snapshot if the source is unavailable.

10Y Treasury

4.49%

Curve shape

normal

Longer maturities yield more than shorter ones, which points to a positively sloped curve.

Recent trend

Last few Treasury sessions

live

Showing the last 5 Treasury observations for 2Y, 10Y, and 30Y.

UST2Y

4.08%

up
+9 bps over recent sessions 5 points

UST10Y

4.49%

up
+4 bps over recent sessions 5 points

UST30Y

4.99%

flat
+1 bps over recent sessions 5 points

Current shape:

normal

normal

Longer maturities yield more than shorter ones, which points to a positively sloped curve.

10Y - 2Y

+41 bps

30Y - 2Y

+91 bps

Visual snapshot

Relative yield levels

UST2Y 4.08%
UST5Y 4.21%
UST10Y 4.49%
UST30Y 4.99%

Coverage

What this release tracks

  • UST2Y benchmark tenor
  • UST5Y benchmark tenor
  • UST10Y benchmark tenor
  • UST30Y benchmark tenor

Source status

US Treasury curve

live

Live Treasury feed loaded from the official U.S. Treasury source.

https://home.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/pages/xml?data=daily_treasury_yield_curve

Comparison table

Yield snapshot by instrument

The ledger stays intentionally narrow: benchmark tenor, current yield, day-over-day move, timestamp, and source.

Instrument Yield Change Updated Source
US Treasury 2Y UST2Y
4.08% +0.03 pts Jun 3, 2026 U.S. Treasury daily par yield curve
US Treasury 5Y UST5Y
4.21% +0.04 pts Jun 3, 2026 U.S. Treasury daily par yield curve
US Treasury 10Y UST10Y
4.49% +0.03 pts Jun 3, 2026 U.S. Treasury daily par yield curve
US Treasury 30Y UST30Y
4.99% +0.02 pts Jun 3, 2026 U.S. Treasury daily par yield curve

After you check yields

Ask what changed, where it changed, and whether you are being paid for the risk.

The most useful follow-up questions are usually about curve shape, the 10Y minus 2Y spread, and whether longer duration still offers enough extra yield.

Recommended reading paths

  • Yield curve basics before comparing maturities
  • Spread and duration context before reaching for longer bonds
  • Treasury strategy guides for ladders and ETF tradeoffs
Read the supporting guides