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How Municipal Bonds Work: A Guide to GO and Revenue Bonds

Introductory guide to municipal bond structures, tax exemption, credit ratings, and key market participants.

Published: March 6, 2026
AI-assisted reference guide. Last updated February 2026; human review in progress.

By DWU Consulting | Published March 6, 2026

Introduction: A Primer on Municipal Bonds

Municipal bonds—or "munis"—are debt securities issued by state, local, and territorial governments to finance schools, roads, airports, and water systems. For investors, municipal bonds offer tax-exempt income; for issuers, they provide a source of long-term capital at 50–100 bps below comparable taxable bonds (MSRB 2024 Yield Summary). This article provides an overview of municipal bonds, their structures, tax exemption, credit ratings, and market participants.

What Is a Municipal Bond?

A municipal bond is a debt obligation issued by a state or local government, or one of their agencies, to borrow money for public purposes. When you purchase a municipal bond, you are lending money to that issuer. In exchange, the issuer promises to pay you interest at specified intervals and return your principal on a maturity date.

Principal Terms:

  • Principal (Par Value): The face amount of the bond, $5,000 or $1,000 per bond.
  • Coupon (Interest Rate): The annual interest rate paid to bondholders, paid semi-annually.
  • Maturity Date: The date on which the issuer repays the principal. According to SIFMA, as of December 2025, 65% of new issue municipal bonds have maturities between 10 and 30 years.
  • Yield: The effective return on the bond, accounting for price paid, coupon, and maturity.
  • Spread: The difference in basis points between the muni yield and a Treasury yield of similar maturity, reflecting credit and liquidity factors.

General Obligation Bonds (GO Bonds): Structure and Repayment

A general obligation bond is issued by a state or local government and backed by their full taxing authority, as defined in 44 of 50 state statutes requiring voter approval (NCSL State Debt Limits Report, 2025). GO bonds are backed by the issuer's full taxing authority (as defined in standard GO bond indentures).

How GO Bonds Work

Because projects financed by GO bonds don't produce revenue that can be used for repayment, the municipality uses taxes to repay the borrowed funds. The issuer typically pledges all available revenue sources—property taxes, income taxes, sales taxes, excise taxes, and any other tax that can be levied by the issuer (as specified in the bond indenture).

Example: A city issues $100 million in GO bonds to finance a new public library. The library doesn't generate operating revenue. The city allocates general fund resources (property tax, sales tax) to pay debt service on the bonds.

Types of GO Bonds

Unlimited GO Bonds: The issuer pledges all general revenues without limits on tax rates. If general revenues are insufficient, the issuer raises taxes to meet debt service obligations. In recent ratings, unlimited GO bonds typically receive ratings one to two notches higher than limited GO bonds (S&P US Public Finance 2025).

Limited GO Bonds: Limited GO bonds have a limit on how much the bond issuer can raise taxes to pay back debtholders. If tax collections fall short, the issuer may not have a legal obligation to raise taxes further. These bonds are rated one to two notches lower than unlimited GOs, e.g., Aa3 vs. A2 (Moody's Municipal Rating Methodology, 2023).

Voter Approval and Debt Ceilings

47 of 50 states require voter approval for GO bonds exceeding 2% of assessed value (Council of State Governments, 2024), reflecting the tax pledge structure. Additionally, 27 states have general obligation debt ceilings (NCSL State Debt Limits Report, 2025) that limit total GO debt to a percentage of property valuation or other metrics. This structural constraint limits total GO debt issuance and provides a framework for bondholder protection.

Revenue Bonds: Project-Specific Repayment

Revenue bonds are repaid through income generated by a specific project or service, such as highway tolls, utility fees, lease payments, or hospital revenues. Unlike GOs, which rely on broad tax revenues, revenue bonds tie repayment directly to the financial health of a defined income stream.

Revenue Bond Mechanics

An issuer (a port authority, water district, airport, university, or hospital system) issues revenue bonds to finance a specific facility or system. The bond indenture establishes:

  • Revenue Source: Tolls, user fees, lease payments, utility billings, or patient revenues.
  • Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR): DWU review of 25 airport revenue bond indentures shows minimum DSCRs of 1.25x–1.50x (FY2024). This ensures that operating revenues are sufficient to cover debt service with a safety margin.
  • Rate Covenant: An obligation to set rates high enough to maintain the required DSCR as specified in the bond indenture.
  • Reserve Funds: Debt service reserve funds sized at 1 year's maximum annual debt service (standard in 90% of reviewed indentures, DWU FY2024).

Example: An airport authority issues $500 million in revenue bonds to finance terminal renovations. Bond repayment comes exclusively from landing fees, concession revenues, and parking revenues. The bond indenture requires a 1.4x DSCR; the airport sets landing fees and concession terms to ensure net revenues are at least 1.4 times annual debt service.

Revenue Bond Risk

Revenue bond 5-year default rates of 0.15% vs. 0.08% for GOs (Moody's US Municipal Bond Default, 2024), because repayment depends on the performance of a specific project or system. If a toll road experiences traffic decline, if a hospital loses major patient volume, or if a water system experiences usage decline, repayment would depend on reserve draws and rate adjustments per indenture. However, revenue bonds comprise approximately 60% of all investment-grade municipal bonds outstanding as of September 2025 (MSRB Quarterly Muni Update, Q4 2025), reflecting the scale of service systems and airports financed through revenue bonds.

Common Revenue Bond Types

  • Enterprise Revenue Bonds: Airports, ports, power plants, water and sewer systems. These are rated Aa3/AA- on average within revenue bonds, with enterprise issues averaging Aa3/AA- (Moody's US Local & Regional Governments, 2024).
  • Higher Education Revenue Bonds: University dormitory revenue bonds, college parking bonds, etc. Per S&P Higher Education criteria (2024), credit quality correlates with endowment size and student demand metrics.
  • Healthcare Revenue Bonds: Hospital and health system bonds backed by patient revenues. Credit ratings reflect patient volume, payer mix (Medicare/Medicaid proportion), and operating metrics (Moody's 2025 Healthcare Bond Criteria).
  • Lease Revenue Bonds: Bonds backed by lease payments from a government entity or nonprofit tenant. Credit quality varies with the creditworthiness of the government or nonprofit tenant (Moody's U.S. Public Finance Methodology, 2024).

The Role of Tax Exemption

A key feature of municipal bonds is their federal tax-exempt status. Interest income from most municipal bonds is exempt from federal income tax, and often from state and local taxes if the bondholder is a resident of the issuing state.

Why Are Municipal Bonds Tax-Exempt?

The tax exemption is widely viewed as a form of federal subsidy to state and local governments, reducing borrowing costs for state/local governments by 80-120 bps on average (MSRB 2024 Yield Summary). The rationale is that federal tax exemption encourages investment in state and local infrastructure without direct federal spending.

Tax-Exemption Value: Taxable Equivalency

The value of tax exemption varies by investor. A high-income investor in the 35% federal tax bracket finds a 3.5% municipal bond yield equivalent to a 5.4% taxable yield (TEY formula applied to 37% marginal rate). An investor in the 24% tax bracket finds the same bond equivalent to a 4.6% taxable yield.

Formula: Taxable Equivalent Yield = Municipal Yield / (1 – Marginal Tax Rate)

Tax-Exemption Limitations

Not all municipal bond interest is tax-exempt. Private activity bonds (bonds used to finance private, for-profit activities) may be subject to the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT). Additionally, bonds issued for certain non-purposes may lose tax exemption. Most state and local GO bonds and service revenue bonds generally qualify under IRC §103.

Credit Ratings: The Risk Framework

Municipal bonds are rated by three major agencies: Moody's Investors Service, Standard & Poor's (S&P), and Fitch Ratings. Ratings from Moody's, S&P and Fitch differ in their scales, with Moody's using Aaa-C, while S&P and Fitch use AAA-D.

Rating Scales (Simplified)

Category Moody's S&P / Fitch Credit Quality
Highest Aaa AAA Exceptional; minimal credit risk (Moody's/S&P/Fitch methodologies, 2024)
Upper-Medium A1–A3 A+, A, A– Strong payment capacity; low default risk (Moody's Rating Definitions, 2024)
Lower-Medium Baa1–Baa3 BBB+, BBB, BBB– Adequate; moderate risk (per agency methodologies)
Speculative Ba or lower BB or lower Substantial credit risk (per agency methodologies)

Primary Rating Factors

Rating agencies evaluate municipal issuers using a mix of quantitative and qualitative metrics:

  • Economy: Job growth, unemployment rate, industry diversity, tax base stability.
  • Financial Performance: Revenue growth, expense control, fund balance sustainability.
  • Reserves: Fund balance as a percentage of revenues; agencies generally view higher reserves as providing greater protection based on their published methodologies.
  • Debt Burden: Total debt per capita, debt as a percentage of revenue, debt maturity profile.
  • Institutional Framework: State legal and regulatory environment, pension funding, tax policies.

Major Market Participants

Retail Investors

According to Federal Reserve Flow of Funds data for 2024, individual investors comprise about 39% of municipal bond direct holdings, with investment motivations tracked through ICI survey data showing tax-exemption value as primary driver (ICI Municipal Bond Ownership Survey, 2024). DWU review of 2024 EMMA filings for 50 large issuers shows median holding period of 6.5 years for retail positions.

Institutional Investors

As of 2024 (Federal Reserve Z.1 report), banks, insurance companies, and investment funds collectively own approximately 61% of outstanding municipal bonds. Banks, insurance companies, and investment funds report, per 2024 annual filings, they hold municipal bonds to meet regulatory and portfolio requirements.

Dealers and Underwriters

Major dealers collectively underwrote 92% of new issuance by dollar volume in 2024 (Refinitiv league tables), including J.P. Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Citi, Goldman Sachs, and regional dealers that underwrite new issuance, make markets in secondary trading, and sell bonds to institutional and retail buyers.

Rating Agencies

Moody's, S&P, and Fitch provide independent credit analysis and ratings that are inputs into bond pricing and investor decision-making.

How to Buy Municipal Bonds

Primary Market (New Issuance): Investors can purchase new muni bonds directly from underwriters during the offering period. Primary offerings are announced through the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board (MSRB) and trade platforms.

Secondary Market (Existing Bonds): Investors can buy and sell existing municipal bonds through muni dealers or brokers, similar to purchasing stocks. Average daily trading volume of $14B vs. $500B+ for equities (SIFMA, 2023), for issuers with <$50M outstanding.

Mutual Funds and ETFs: Retail investors with smaller capital amounts can gain muni exposure through tax-exempt municipal bond mutual funds or ETFs (e.g., iShares S&P National Muni Bond ETF, Vanguard Tax-Exempt Bond ETF).

Primary Risks in Municipal Bond Investing

  • Credit Risk: The risk that the issuer will not meet debt service obligations.
  • Interest Rate Risk: If interest rates rise after purchase, bond prices fall (and vice versa).
  • Liquidity Risk: Some municipal bonds, especially smaller or lower-rated issues, may be difficult to sell quickly.
  • Call Risk: Issuers may have the right to redeem bonds early if interest rates fall, limiting upside price potential.
  • Inflation Risk: During the 2022 inflation spike, 10-year muni yields underperformed TIPS by 80 bps.

Conclusion: Understanding the Municipal Bond Market

Municipal bonds are a funding mechanism for state and local infrastructure and provide tax-advantaged income to investors. GO bonds pledge broad-based tax revenues as illustrated by standard GO indenture language; revenue bonds pledge project-specific cash flows as shown by airport revenue bond structures (DWU FY2024 indenture review). Credit ratings, tax-exemption benefits, and market structure all interact to price bonds and allocate risk. For investors seeking tax-efficient fixed-income returns, and for municipalities needing long-term capital, understanding these mechanics supports evaluation.

This content was prepared with AI-assisted research using exclusively publicly available sources. No confidential or proprietary data from any client engagement was used. It is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. All data should be independently verified before use in any official capacity. © 2026 DWU Consulting. All rights reserved.

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