A middle-age Millionaires' Row: Average 50-something now has net worth over $1 million

Home ownership looms large in America's rising household net worth · USA TODAY

Sometime around age 50, the average American can now expect a household net worth exceeding $1 million.

How did so many 50-somethings become millionaires?

Household wealth swelled at a record pace during the pandemic. From 2019 to 2022, the median net worth of American families jumped 37% to $192,900, after adjusting for inflation. It’s the largest increase ever recorded by the federal Survey of Consumer Finances, released last fall. Surging home values and rising stock ownership fed the surge.

Some of the new numbers are startling. Average household net worth now tops $500,000 for Americans in their late 30s. For late-40-somethings, it exceeds $750,000. For 50-somethings, it reaches seven figures.

If you’re a 50-something and you’re not worth a cool $1 million, do not despair. Those numbers are averages, and the super-rich drive them waaaay up.

The “median” American household – picture the middle number in a long list of numbers – achieves a net worth of about $300,000 in the 50-to-59 age range, a far cry from $1 million.

And those figures are from 2022. By many accounts, Americans' net worth continues to rise.

One component is retirement savings. The average 401(k) account balance rose 14% to $118,600 in 2023, according to Fidelity Investments.

Home values, too, continue their upward march. The median sale price for existing homes rose from $360,800 to $384,500 between February 2023 and February 2024, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The 1%: The wealthiest American earners now own more wealth than the entire middle class

Here is how net worth breaks down, decade by decade

To illustrate how wealth stacks up over the years, here is a decade-by-decade breakdown of net worth in America.

20-somethings

  • Average net worth: $120,896 (ages 20-24), $120,185 (ages 25-29)

  • Median net worth: $10,800 (ages 20-24), $30,160 (ages 25-29)

In our 20s, most of us are just starting out. We’re working our first jobs at relatively low pay. We’re digging out of student debt. On the upside, we probably don’t have many other expenses.

“You’re off on your own for the first time,” said Liz Gillette, a certified financial planner in Edgewater, Maryland. “You’ve got liabilities coming in, like your first car, your student loans. And then, you’re just building your way toward saving for retirement.”

For 20-somethings, “the biggest factor is debt,” said Jonathan Swanburg, a certified financial planner in Houston. “You’ve accumulated a bunch of school debt, and you haven’t had a chance to work, so your net worth is often in the negative. You’re just trying to get out of the hole.”