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Survey: The average American feels they need to earn over $186K a year just to live comfortably

Few Americans are making the kind of money they feel they need to live comfortably — and most think it’s unlikely that they ever will.

Just 6 percent of the Americans who have an idea of what they’d need to earn to feel secure say they are already earning that annual income, according to Bankrate’s annual Financial Freedom Survey. About 2 in 5 (37 percent) say it’s likely that they’ll one day earn that income, while 31 percent indicate it’s unlikely and 18 percent think their income will never get to that level in their lifetime.

Those findings come as Americans report for the second year in a row that they need to make a major six-figure salary (over $186,000 a year, on average) just to live comfortably, more than double what the average full-time, year-round worker typically makes (about $79,000, according to the Census Bureau), Bankrate’s polling finds.

Shockingly, most Americans aspire to get to a place where they’re living comfortably or unburdened by financial worries — not to live in a state of financial opulence. These days, financial success looks like living comfortably, being financially prepared for the future and not worrying about money, according to a previous Bankrate poll. Even so, most don’t consider themselves financially successful.

Getting their finances to a steady state can be challenging when the same goods, services and wealth-building opportunities of years past require more income. Prices have risen almost 21 percent since the pandemic, requiring an extra $210 per every $1,000 someone used to spend on the typical consumer basket, Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows. Not to mention, other longer-term challenges from housing to college affordability are at play. Americans now need a six-figure salary to afford a typical home in almost half of U.S. states, and households are feeling that college tuition prices have gotten out of hand, separate Bankrate data indicates.

Key takeaways on Americans’ feelings of financial security in 2024

  • Rising feelings of financial insecurity: Just 1 in 4 (25%) Americans say they are completely financially secure, down from 28% in 2023. Whereas 72% of Americans indicated they were not completely financially secure in 2023, that number has now risen to 75% in 2024. Three in 10 (30%) Americans say they are not completely financially secure and likely never will be, up from 26% in 2023.

  • The cost of living comfortably: On average, Americans feel they’d need to earn over $186,000 to feel financially secure or comfortable, a 20 percent drop from 2023 but still more than two times what the average full-time, year-round worker earned in 2022 (about $79,000), according to Census Bureau data.

  • How much it takes to be rich: To feel rich, the average American feels they need to earn $520,000 a year, an 8 percent increase from $483,000 in 2023.

  • Expecting the worst: Slightly more than 1 in 3 who have a vision for the income it takes to live comfortably (37%) say it’s likely they’ll one day earn the annual income they feel they need to be financially secure or comfortable, including 16 percent who say it’s highly likely. That compares with 31% of Americans who say it’s unlikely that they’ll ever make their desired income, including 17% who say it’s highly unlikely. About 1 in 5 (18%) who say they never will.