3 Things Millennials Won’t Be Able To Afford in Less Than a Decade
fizkes / Getty Images/iStockphoto
fizkes / Getty Images/iStockphoto

The cost of living continues to rise. In the past decade alone, the cumulative inflation rate was 33% with an average inflation rate of 2.92%. Wages, however, haven’t always kept up with rising costs.

Some everyday services and goods, including major purchases like real estate, have also become disproportionately expensive compared to others, making them far less affordable even today.

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For millennials, most of whom are in the early to middle stages of their careers, this has become a very real — and very expensive — problem. If costs continue to rise as they have, some experts believe this generation won’t be able to afford certain things in another 10 years.

Here are three things the average millennial won’t be able to afford in less than a decade unless they take some key steps now.

Real Estate

The cost of housing has risen rapidly over the decades. Younger millennials especially often find themselves needing roommates just to afford housing costs.

According to a Pew Research study from a few years ago, 32% of adults share their living space with another adult who isn’t their spouse, partner or young adult child.

Both rental and purchase prices are exorbitantly high in many parts of the U.S. The average 901-square-foot apartment rental costs $1,748. The average home sales price in Q3 2024 was $501,100.

Millennials who want to buy property can expect prices to continue going up in the coming decade.

“Home prices are expected to keep rising, especially in urban areas where demand outpaces supply,” said Antwyne DeLonde, a former financial advisor and discretionary portfolio manager. “Interest rate hikes further complicate affordability.”

According to Yahoo Finance, home prices are high thanks in part to inventory shortages in many parts of the country. The house price-to-income ratio, which calculates the median household income alongside the median home value, has also risen disproportionately over the past few decades.

Consider This: What Is the Median Income for the Upper Middle Class in 2024?

Healthcare

Healthcare and medical expenses are another big financial problem for millennials. This is nothing new, but it could get worse in the coming decade if history’s anything to go by.

According to the Peterson-KFF Health System Tracker, the total health spending was $74.1 billion in 1970. It was $1.4 trillion just 30 years later. By 2022, the total health spending had risen to $4.5 trillion, though some of this rapid increase was due to the COVID-19 pandemic.