Target range, effective fed funds, and SOFR
View chart data table
| Date | Target Lower | Target Upper | Effective FFR | SOFR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chart data will appear after the chart initializes. | ||||
Track the Federal Reserve target range, effective fed funds rate, SOFR, and recent policy changes.
| Date | Target Lower | Target Upper | Effective FFR | SOFR |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chart data will appear after the chart initializes. | ||||
Chart is set to the one year range.
Data from FRED® | Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis | This product uses the FRED API but is not endorsed or certified by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
| Series | Current | Previous | 1 Week | 1 Month | 1 Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Target Upper Bound DFEDTARU | 3.75% | 0 bps | 0 bps | 0 bps | -75 bps |
| Effective Fed Funds DFF | 3.63% | 0 bps | 0 bps | -1 bps | -70 bps |
| SOFR SOFR | 3.55% | -1 bps | -5 bps | -17 bps | -76 bps |
| Monthly Fed Funds FEDFUNDS | 3.64% | 0 bps | 0 bps | 0 bps | -69 bps |
The FOMC sets a target range for the federal funds rate—the rate at which banks lend reserves to each other overnight. The effective federal funds rate is the volume-weighted average of actual overnight transactions.
When the effective rate sits comfortably within the target range, the Fed's policy implementation is working as intended.
SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) is based on Treasury repo transactions. While not the Fed's policy rate, it reflects overnight funding conditions in secured markets.
Comparing SOFR with fed funds shows whether secured and unsecured overnight markets are aligned.
The federal funds rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions lend reserve balances to other depository institutions overnight. The FOMC sets a target range for this rate as its primary tool for implementing monetary policy.
The target rate is the range the FOMC sets as its policy goal. The effective rate is the actual volume-weighted average of overnight transactions. The effective rate typically trades within the target range, confirming the Fed's policy is being implemented correctly.
SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) is a benchmark rate based on transactions in the Treasury repurchase agreement market. It reflects secured overnight borrowing costs, while fed funds represents unsecured interbank lending. Both tend to move together but can diverge during market stress.
The FOMC meets eight times per year to review economic conditions and decide on monetary policy. Rate changes are announced at the end of these scheduled meetings, though the Fed can act between meetings in extraordinary circumstances.
No. This dashboard tracks realized rates and official target ranges from FRED. It does not estimate market-implied probabilities of future rate moves from Fed Funds futures or options markets.
The page uses a 4-hour server-side cache. FRED observations are date-based (daily for most series), so the page displays "Data as of" reflecting the latest available observation date, not an intraday timestamp.
Disclaimer: This dashboard is for education and research only. It is not investment, tax, legal, or financial planning advice. Always verify source data before making financial decisions.
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