The US personal savings rate is approximately 4.6%. That headline number masks enormous variation: top-quintile earners save 15–25% of income, while bottom-quintile earners often have a negative savings rate — spending more than they earn by drawing on credit or depleting assets. Here is how the numbers actually break down.

Average Savings Rate by Income Quintile

Based on Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances and BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey data:

Income Quintile Approx. Income Range Average Savings Rate Median Savings Rate
Bottom 20% Under $30,000 −2.3% −6.1%
Second 20% $30,000–$52,000 1.8% 0.4%
Middle 20% $52,000–$82,000 6.4% 4.8%
Fourth 20% $82,000–$130,000 11.2% 9.6%
Top 20% Over $130,000 24.7% 19.3%
Top 5% Over $290,000 38.2% 32.1%

A negative savings rate means the group as a whole is spending more than after-tax income — financing consumption through borrowing or drawing down existing assets.

Savings Rate by Specific Income Level

More granular view, estimated from SCF and BLS CEX data:

Annual Income Avg. Monthly Income (after tax) Avg. Monthly Spending Avg. Monthly Saved Savings Rate
$35,000 $2,620 $2,600 $20 0.8%
$50,000 $3,610 $3,440 $170 4.7%
$60,000 $4,260 $3,920 $340 8.0%
$75,000 $5,180 $4,680 $500 9.7%
$100,000 $6,720 $5,840 $880 13.1%
$125,000 $8,100 $6,700 $1,400 17.3%
$150,000 $9,460 $7,420 $2,040 21.6%

After-tax income estimated using standard 2026 tax rates and FICA. Spending from BLS CEX 2023 data.

The Gap Between What People Save and What They Need

The recommended savings rate to retire comfortably at 65 on roughly 70–80% of pre-retirement income:

Current Age Income Recommended Total Savings Rate Typical Actual Rate Shortfall
30 $60,000 15% ($9,000/yr) 6–8% 7–9%
35 $80,000 15% ($12,000/yr) 9–11% 4–6%
40 $90,000 18% ($16,200/yr) 10–12% 6–8%
45 $100,000 22% ($22,000/yr) 12–14% 8–10%

The gap represents money not being saved that, if invested, could grow substantially before retirement. A 40-year-old saving 10% instead of 18% on a $90,000 income is leaving $7,200/year out of their retirement account. At 7% over 25 years, that $7,200/year difference compounds to $473,000.

Where Does the Money Go? Average Household Spending

Understanding why savings rates are low requires looking at where income actually goes. BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey 2023, household earning $75,000:

Category Annual Spending % of Pre-Tax Income
Housing (rent/mortgage, utilities, insurance) $22,400 29.9%
Transportation (vehicle, gas, insurance, transit) $12,100 16.1%
Food (at home + dining out) $9,800 13.1%
Healthcare $5,700 7.6%
Personal insurance & pensions $6,800 9.1%
All other (clothing, entertainment, misc.) $9,200 12.3%
Total spending $66,000 88.0%
Available for saving $9,000 12.0%

For a $75,000 household, the math roughly works — but only if discretionary spending is tightly controlled. Many households let the “all other” category expand, pushing savings toward zero.

The Three Levers That Move Savings Rate

1. Housing cost

Housing is typically the largest spending category and the hardest to reduce short-term. Every 1% of income moved out of housing into savings is meaningful. Going from 35% of income on housing to 30% adds 5 percentage points to your savings rate.

2. Vehicle costs

Americans earning $50,000–$100,000 typically spend 15–18% of income on transportation. Driving a reliable used car vs. financing a new car can free $300–$500/month — enough to meaningfully move the savings rate.

3. Income growth without lifestyle inflation

The data shows clearly that savings rates rise dramatically with income — but only when lifestyle inflation is controlled. Someone who earns $50,000 and lives on $45,000 who then earns $75,000 and lives on $55,000 has moved their savings from $5,000/year to $20,000/year — a 4x increase in actual savings from a 50% raise, by capturing most of the increase.

What a 1% Savings Rate Increase Actually Means

For someone earning $75,000, each 1% increase in savings rate = $750/year more saved. Invested at 7% over 30 years, each 1% of savings rate = approximately $75,000 in additional retirement wealth.

Raising from 5% to 15%: 10 percentage points × $75,000 = $750,000 more at retirement on a $75,000 income. This is the compounding case for prioritizing savings rate over investment returns.

Where the US Savings Rate Has Been

Context matters. The US personal savings rate has been:

  • April 2020: 33.8% (COVID-era forced savings + stimulus)
  • 2019 average: 8.8% (pre-pandemic norm)
  • 2022: 3.3% (post-pandemic drawdown)
  • 2025: ~4.6%
  • 1975: ~17% (highest sustained period)

The long-term decline reflects structural changes: stagnant real wages for median earners, rising housing costs, and the shift from defined-benefit pensions (which forced saving) to defined-contribution plans (which require discipline).

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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