Coupon Payment
The periodic interest payment a bondholder receives, equal to the face value multiplied by the coupon rate divided by the payment frequency.
What is Coupon Payment?
A coupon payment is the fixed dollar amount of interest a bondholder receives at each payment date. The term comes from the era of paper bearer bonds that had physical coupons investors clipped and redeemed. Today, coupon payments are made electronically. The annual coupon equals face value times the coupon rate; for bonds that pay semi-annually — the US market convention — each payment is half the annual amount. Zero-coupon bonds make no periodic payments; instead they are issued at a discount and repay face value at maturity.
Formula
Worked Example
Semi-annual payment schedule
Source: US Department of the Treasury — Treasury Securities (2024-01-01)
Calculate Coupon Payment
Par value of the bond
Annual coupon rate stated on the bond indenture
1 = annual, 2 = semi-annual (US standard), 4 = quarterly
Coupon Payment
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How to Interpret Coupon Payment
📚 Bond Basics — Complete the path
- Bond Price
- Coupon Payment
- Yield to Maturity
- Yield to Call
- Bond Equivalent Yield