How Your Net Worth Compares to Others in Your Income Bracket

How Your Net Worth Compares to Others in Your Income Bracket

_See how net worth breaks down across lower, middle, and upper income tiers.
Credit: Getty
_

Dara-Abasi Ita

Wed, February 25, 2026 at 7:17 PM GMT+9 3 min read

Key Takeaway

Your paycheck isn't the only way you earn money, and for wealthier Americans, it's not even the main one.
The gap between what you earn at work and what your money earns through investing is the biggest driver of the wealth divide.
A median-income family has a net worth of about $192,900, but the top 10% of earners have a median net worth more than $2.5 million, per the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances.

Americans earn money two ways: from their jobs and from their investments—a key reason to disentangle net worth from income, which are often confused. Your income bracket indicates how much you earn in a given year. Your net worth is everything you own minus everything you owe, built up over a lifetime.

In the race to get ahead, these financial sources run at very different speeds: in 2025, wages grew about 3.3%; those invested in the S&P 500, a broad stock market index, had a return of 18%. That means someone with $50,000 in an index fund gained more last year—without lifting a finger—than most workers got from a raise. And that gap compounds. The top 10% of households hold about 67% of total U.S. wealth; the bottom 50% hold roughly 2.5%.

Below, we take you through the net worth for each income bracket.

What Americans Are Actually Worth By Income Tier

That’s why your income isn’t the final word on your financial future. Two families earning $85,000 can have wildly different financial lives depending on whether one of them started investing early, owns a home, or carries $40,000 in student debt. Net worth captures what your paycheck doesn’t: how much of your money you’ve kept, and how much it’s been earning as stocks or property you own go up in value.

The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, last updated with 2022 data, shows just how wide the gaps are:

Bottom 20% of earners: $14,000 median net worth
Middle earners (40th–60th percentile): $159,300
Upper-middle (60th–80th): $307,200
Top 10%: $2,556,200

For families in the middle-income range—roughly $56,600 to $169,800 for a three-person household, per Pew Research Center—home equity makes up most of their wealth. The Census Bureau’s 2025 Current Population Survey estimates the median household income at $83,730 for 2024.

About half (52%) of U.S. adults fall into that middle tier. These households hold the bulk of their assets in real estate and vehicles, while the top quartile leans heavily into stocks and business equity.

Meanwhile, 37% of adults in the Federal Reserve’s 2024 SHED survey said they couldn’t fully cover a $400 emergency expense with cash.

Story continues  

That number hasn’t budged since 2022.

Fact Box

Charles Schwab’s 2025 Modern Wealth Survey found that Americans believe it takes $2.3 million to be considered wealthy and $839,000 just to feel financially comfortable. The national median household net worth is $192,900.

What Actually Moves the Needle

What separates people within the same income bracket is whether they get their money onto the other track — the one that compounds. Vanguard’s How America Saves 2025 report found that the average worker put away 7.7% of their paycheck in 2024, a record high, bringing those who have 401(k)s up to about 12% with their employer match. That’s about 3% less than the standard savings rate for these accounts.

Among workers earning under $15,000, retirement plan participation was just 31% across all, and only 14% in plans with voluntary enrollment.

Read the original article on Investopedia

Terms and Privacy Policy

Privacy Dashboard

More Info

This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin