Our credit card debt threatens to swamp our savings. Here's how to deal with both

The nation’s mounting credit card debt threatens to swamp its savings.

More than one-third of American adults – 36% – have more credit card debt than emergency savings, according to an annual survey by Bankrate, the personal finance site. In more than a decade of polling, the figure has never been higher.

That is one of several recent reports that show consumers falling behind on their credit cards.

Roughly half of all credit card holders now carry balances from month to month, Bankrate found in another survey, up from 39% in 2021.

The average borrower holds $6,360 in card debt, TransUnion reports, an all-time high.

“It’s worrisome because credit card rates are at record highs,” said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate. “Unfortunately, we’re moving in the wrong direction on a lot of this.”

Credit card balances and interest rates are rising hand in hand
Credit card balances and interest rates are rising hand in hand

Credit card balances and interest rates are rising apace

Card balances are rising apace with interest rates: The higher the rate, the more you must pay to bring the balance down.

The average credit card now charges 21.5% interest, according to a WalletHub index. That’s the highest rate on record.

On top of that, Bankrate found, 43% of cardholders with debt don’t know how much interest they’re paying.

Credit card debt is rising at a time when America is struggling to save.

The personal savings rate stood at 3.8% in January, according to federal data, meaning that consumers set aside only a smidgen of their income as savings.

That’s not an all-time low, but it’s close. For most of the past 10 years, the savings rate has ranged above 5%.

In Bankrate’s annual emergency savings report, published last month, more than two-fifths of adults said they lacked the savings to cover an emergency expense of $1,000 or more. The report draws from several recent surveys.

Over the longer term, however, Americans are doing a better job at saving.

The median household held $8,000 “transaction accounts” in 2022, up from about $5,000 in 2010, according to the federal Survey of Consumer Finances. Transaction accounts include savings and checking.

But the federal survey doesn’t fully capture the run-up in credit card rates, which began in mid-2022.

The average interest rate charged on credit cards rose to 21.5% in November 2023 from 15.1% in May 2022, according to WalletHub.

Card rates rose along with interest rates generally: Federal regulators launched a historic campaign of rate increases to tamp down inflation, which peaked at a 40-year high of over 9% in the summer of 2022.

Living without debt has become increasingly difficult and sometimes overwhelming for American consumers.
Living without debt has become increasingly difficult and sometimes overwhelming for American consumers.

Build your savings, or pay down your credit card debt?

Taken together, the data suggest many Americans face a dilemma: Build your emergency savings, or pay down your credit card debt?