The holidays are here. So is record credit card debt. How 6 Americans are coping.

The holidays are perilous for the nation’s credit card holders. This year, the stakes feel higher than ever.
The holidays are perilous for the nation’s credit card holders. This year, the stakes feel higher than ever.

The holidays are a perilous time for the nation’s credit card holders. This year, the stakes feel higher than ever.

America faces a crushing credit card burden. The nation’s collective card balance stands at a record $1.08 trillion, as of the end of September. The average interest rate has hit 21%, the highest figure recorded by the Federal Reserve in nearly three decades of tracking.

And now, the holidays are here. Thanksgiving ushers in the season of giving – and spending. The average holiday shopper expects to spend $1,652 this year, Deloitte reports, a bigger splurge than in any of the last three years.

Much of the tab will go on cards. In an October survey of 1,036 consumers by CardRates.com, 38% of respondents said they plan to carry holiday credit card debt into the new year.

Other Americans are determined to cut back.

Angela Davis, 31, of Detroit is working with credit counselors to pay off $19,000 in card debt. This holiday season, she plans to keep her remaining cards under wraps. She hopes her loved ones will understand.

“I don’t know what their plans are,” she joked, “but I’ve already made it clear that I’m not spending no money.”

Her prudence comes even as more Americans fall behind on credit card payments, with the delinquency rate at nearly 3%, its highest point in more than a decade.

Credit counseling services are seeing a steady uptick in new clients, especially Gen Zers and millennials. At the credit counseling nonprofit Money Management International, the average new client comes in with nearly $30,000 in unsecured debt, the category that includes credit cards, up from about $20,000 at the start of 2022.

Credit counselors usually get less busy around the holidays, as consumers stop trying to manage their debt and double down on spending. This year is different.

“We’ve actually seen a continued acceleration of people reaching out,” said Thomas Nitzsche, senior director of media and brand at the counseling service.

Here are the stories of six Americans who are battling credit card debt:

Christmas shopping in summer

The holidays are a stressful time of the year for Alyssa Barnhart.

The 30-year-old said she started to get into credit card debt around 2011 after a short stint with Mary Kay had her purchasing over $1,000 in products she struggled to sell.

Initially, she used the card mostly for groceries or emergencies, with a few “dumb decisions,” Barnhart said. But she was able to make her minimum payments, and her credit card company slowly began to push up her limit from $3,000 to $9,000.

Things began to spiral last summer, when Barnhart’s landlord in Bozeman, Montana, kicked her and her boyfriend out of their home to sell the property.