Does Your Wealth Put You Into the Middle Class? (2024)

Does Your Wealth Put You Into the Middle Class? (1)

The middle class is a reflection of household economic resources, measured by either income or wealth. Many expert sources use income to define the middle class. For example, the Pew Research Center defines middle-class households as those earning between two-thirds and two times the U.S. median household income. That’s between $45,014 and $134,502, using the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2020 median income of $67,521.

Using income to define the middle class has one significant drawback: It doesn’t account for the assets a household has, such as real estate or investments. For example, many retired households have a high net worth but a modest household income. They don’t need a high income, because their homes and cars are often paid off, and they don’t need to save for retirement.

Key Takeaways

  • Net worth equals your owned assets minus your debt.
  • The average net worth of the American middle class is between $43,760 and $201,800
  • Age and educational level tend to contribute to wealth

How Is Net Worth Calculated?

Net worth is a measurement of wealth: It is the total of all the assets a household owns minus all the debt it owes.

Typical assets include:

  • Net home equity, which is your home's resale value minus mortgages and selling costs
  • Your car or truck’s resale value minus its outstanding loan value
  • Financial assets, such as retirement account, savings, and cash
  • The resale value of household items such as consumer electronics, jewelry, or art

Household debt includes large amounts like mortgages, auto loans, and student loans. It also includes medical debt and outstanding credit card debt.

How Is the Average Middle-Class Net Worth Calculated?

Several government agencies calculate and report on net worth. To understand these reports, you first need to understand what averages and quintiles mean.

Averages

As a practical matter, there are two types of “averages”: the median and the mean.

  • The median is the middle point in a range of statistics, sorted in order. For example, in the list of numbers 8, 10, 13, 20, 40, the median is the number 13 because it’s exactly in the middle of the five figures.
  • The mean is determined by adding up the data set and dividing it by the number of statistics in it. For the same range, the mean is (8+10+13+20+40) / 5 = 91 / 5 = 18.2. This is the number we usually think of when we say “average.”

For U.S. wealth, the mean, or average, gives an inflated figure because of the concentration of wealth at the top of the range. As a result, the median provides a better sense of the actual American “average” than the mean does.

According to U.S. Census data, the average net worth for U.S. households in 2019 (latest data available) was $445,900. The median net worth was $118,200. That’s a pretty big difference, and it shows how the concentration of wealth among the richest households can skew the mean.

Quintiles

The U.S. Census Bureau uses quintiles to further dive into the nation’s net worth. A quintile is one-fifth of a group, just like a quartile is one-fourth of a group. Dividing Americans into five income groups allows a more detailed look at the middle class.

Note

The bottom wealth quintile is the division with the lowest net worth. The top wealth quintile is the richest 20% of households.

The bottom quintile tends to include younger households and those without much education. Younger groups have not really had a chance to accumulate wealth, and there is a positive correlation between levels of education and levels of wealth. The top quintile typically has a higher percentage of older households and those with the most education.

The middle class is often defined as the middle three quintiles. Some further classify this group as lower-middle class, middle class, and upper-middle class. The table below shows the median net worth for these quintiles:

QuintileDefinitionMedian Net Worth
Bottom 20%Poverty Class$6,030
Next 20%Lower-Middle Class$43,760
Middle 20%Middle Class$104,700
Next 20%Upper-Middle Class$201,800
Top 20%Wealthy$608,900

Note

If your net worth is between $43,760 and $201,800, you are in the middle class.

Average Net Worth by Age

Net worth increases by age, because households accumulate assets over time, including property, cars or other vehicles, and retirement savings. As the table below shows, wealth reaches a peak at retirement age and then declines as retirees spend down their assets.

Here’s a comparison of the median and mean net worth by age group:

Age BracketMedian Net WorthMean Net Worth
Younger than 35$15,700$98,220
35-44$83,150$282,100
45-54$139,200$467,500
55-64$203,900$582,700
65-69$266,400$690,800
70-74$305,100$738,600
75+$249,500$633,400

This comparison shows how the mean is much higher, regardless of age. Again, that’s due to the concentration of wealth in the richest households.

Average Net Worth by Education

Education is highly correlated with net worth, as shown in the table below. Those without a high-school diploma only own about $5,090 in median net assets. A high-school diploma boosts that to $40,560. A bachelor’s degree quintuples that wealth to $196,800. An advanced degree doubles that to $408,700. The mean is given in the table below for comparison.

EducationMedian Net WorthMean Net Worth
No High-School Diploma$5,090$86,360
High-School Graduate$40,560$206,000
Some College$59,700$265,500
Associate’s Degree$110,300$305,800
Bachelor’s Degree$196,800$554,100
Graduate/Professional Degree$408,700$864,300

A Federal Reserve study found that education can help create wealth in three ways:

  1. The head-start effect: Families headed by college-educated parents are often in a position to earn more than those without college degrees, potentially giving these children a head start in life as they're more likely to have access to better-performing school districts, private schools, and tutors.
  2. The upward-mobility effect: When a child born into a family without a college degree earns their diploma, they can improve their economic standing substantially. Such a family is likely to rise 23% in income percentile ranking relative to where they'd be without a degree.
  3. The downward-mobility effect: This occurs when the children of parents who earned a degree don't earn a college degree themselves. Statistically, they drag down their wealth by 18 percentiles.

Racial Disparities and the Wealth Gap

Racial wealth disparities are most pronounced between White and Asian households, and Black, Latino, and Native-American households.

The median net worth for White households is $150,300, while for Asian households it's $206,400. For Black households, it’s $14,100. The net worth for Hispanic households is $31,700. For all others, it’s $37,850.

The racial wealth gap also exists among Black people who are highly educated and come from two-parent homes. In a 2013 study by the Economic Policy Institute, the median wealth of Black families with graduate or professional degrees was $200,000 less than that of similarly educated White families.

Note

Black or Latino college graduates tend to have disproportionately less wealth than White high-school dropouts.

Similarly, two-parent Black households tend to have less wealth than single-parent White households.

A McKinsey study found that this achievement gap has cost the U.S. economy more than all recessions. If there had been no achievement gap in the years between 1998 and 2008, U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) would have been $525 billion higher in 2008. Similarly, if low-income students had the same educational achievement as their wealthier peers over that same period, they would have added $670 billion in GDP.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What does "middle class" mean?

There is no single definition of the middle class. Income, net worth, education, and occupational status all contribute to someone's wealth and sense of financial security. Ultimately, members of the middle class tend to have a modest sense of financial freedom but still must rely on things like their ongoing earning potential and sources of credit to cover life's major expenses or to purchase significant assets.

How many Americans are middle class?

Roughly 51% of Americans are considered middle class, according to a 2018 Pew Research Center analysis.

What does "net worth" mean?

Your net worth is one important measurement of your financial health. Because it measures the difference between what you own and what you still owe, it reveals important information about your ability to pay off your debts and have assets available for long-term living expenses, retirement, and your estate. The greater your net worth, the more financial freedom you are likely to experience.

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Sources

The Balance uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.

  1. Pew Research Center. "America’s Shrinking Middle Class: A Close Look at Changes Within Metropolitan Areas."

  2. United States Census Bureau. "Income and Poverty in the United States: 2020."

  3. U.S. Census Bureau. "Wealth, Asset Ownership, and Debt of Households Detailed Tables: 2019." Download Excel Spreadsheet "Wealth and Asset Ownership," Table 5.

  4. U.S. Census Bureau. "Wealth, Asset Ownership, and Debt of Households Detailed Tables: 2019." Download Excel Spreadsheet. "Wealth and Asset Ownership," Table 1.

  5. St. Louis Federal Reserve. "Education, Income, and Wealth."

  6. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. "The Financial Returns from College Across Generations: Large but Unequal."

  7. Economic Policy Institute. "The Racial Wealth Gap: How African-Americans Have Been Shortchanged Out of the Materials to Build Wealth."

  8. Demos. "The Asset Value of Whiteness: Understanding the Racial Wealth Gap."

  9. McKinsey and Company. "The Economic Cost of the U.S. Education Gap."

  10. Pew Research Center. "Are You in the American Middle Class? Find out With Our Income Calculator."

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Does Your Wealth Put You Into the Middle Class? (2024)

FAQs

How much money puts you in the middle class? ›

In 2024, a large U.S. city's middle-class income averages between $52,000 and $155,000, with the median household income across all 345 cities at $77,345, making middle-class income limits fall between $51,558 and $154,590, SmartAsset noted.

What puts you in the middle class? ›

Middle-class income currently ranges from a little under $40,000 to a little over $119,000. The definition of middle class extends beyond income to factors like education, location and marital status.

Does middle class mean wealthy? ›

The middle class is the economic stratum between the working class and the wealthy. In the United States, the middle class occupies about half of the population, mainly consisting of people who work in white-collar professions, small businesses, or skilled trades.

How much wealth does the middle class control? ›

The top 1% holds $38.7 trillion in wealth. That's more than the combined wealth of America's middle class, a group many economists define as the middle 60% of households by income. Those households hold about 26% of all wealth. Low-income Americans, representing the bottom 20% by income, own about 3% of the wealth.

What makes you middle class? ›

According to the OECD, the middle class refers to households with income between 75% and 200% of the median national income.

What is poor class income? ›

Lower Class: This typically includes individuals or families living paycheck to paycheck, struggling to cover basic necessities like food, housing, and healthcare. Income here could range from below the poverty line to around $30,000 per year.

At what point are you considered middle class? ›

As of 2022 (the most recent Census data), the average median household income in the U.S. was $73,914, meaning the national range for the middle class is roughly $49,271 to $147,828. Across the nation's largest cities, the range is between $51,558 and $154,590, according to SmartAsset.

How do I know I'm middle class? ›

Lower middle class: Those in the 20th to 40th percentile of household income, between $28,008 and $55,000. Middle class: Those in the 40th to 60th percentile of household income, ranging from $55,001 to $89,744. Upper middle class: Households in the 60th to 80th percentile, with incomes between $89,745 and $149,131.

What describes the middle class? ›

: a class occupying a position between the upper class and the lower class. especially : a fluid heterogeneous socioeconomic grouping composed principally of business and professional people, bureaucrats, and some farmers and skilled workers sharing common social characteristics and values.

Are doctors middle class? ›

The lower middle class is often made up of less educated people with lower incomes, such as managers, small business owners, teachers, and secretaries. The upper middle class is often made up of highly educated business and professional people with high incomes, such as doctors, lawyers, stockbrokers, and CEOs.

What is considered wealthy? ›

For example, you may be considered rich if you're in the nation's top 1% of earners. In 2022, that group saw an average annual income from wages of $785,968—nearly 19 times higher than the bottom 90%, according to the Economic Policy Institute Open in new tab.

How do you know if you're in upper class? ›

Upper middle class might mean earning 15-50% above the median with a comfortable financial cushion, while the upper class generally refers to the top 1-3% earners with substantial wealth and investment-derived income,” said Jeff Rose, CFP and founder of Good Financial Cents.

Why is middle class struggling? ›

These cost increases mean that even families classified as middle class are struggling to keep up with expenses, especially as the costs of basic necessities are rising faster than the overall rate of inflation, says Stephanie Hoopes, national director of United For ALICE, the research arm of United Way of Northern New ...

How wealthy are Americans? ›

Americans' average net worth by age

The most recent report includes data collected mainly in 2022. Between 2019 and 2022, the median net worth of U.S. households surged 37% to $192,900, according to the report. The mean, or average, net worth increased 23% to $1,063,700.

Do the rich live longer than the middle class? ›

Income in the United States. The richest American men live 15 years longer than the poorest men, while the richest American women live 10 years longer than the poorest women. The gaps between the rich and the poor are growing rapidly over time.

How much money do you get out of middle class? ›

Put another way, if you're making less than $43,350 in your household, you are probably considered a low-income family. If you're making between $43,350 and $130,000, you're considered middle class. If you're earning $130,000 and above, you're likely considered upper class.

Is $200 K middle class? ›

One commonly used definition from the Pew Research Center sets a middle-class income between two-thirds and twice the national median income, or $67,819 to $203,458 for a family of four in 2022. Most Americans consider the lower end of that range, $75,000 and $100,000, to be middle class, according to the Post poll.

Is $150 000 middle class? ›

However, new research from GOBankingRates shows that in some major U.S. cities, an annual income of $150,000 is only enough to qualify as “lower middle class.” This is especially pronounced in two Northern California cities and Arlington, Virginia.

Is 500k middle class? ›

With a $500,000+ income, you are considered rich, wherever you live! According to the IRS, any household who makes over $500,000 a year in 2023 is considered a top 1% income earner. Of course, some parts of the country require a higher income level to be in the top 1% income, e.g. Connecticut at $580,000.

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