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Americans across generations are carrying more debt than they did three decades ago, according to Federal Reserve data, but the rise has been especially steep among the oldest age groups.
The Fed’s most recent Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) found that among all groups younger than 65, debt roughly doubled from 1992 to 2022. That’s in line with inflation over that time.
But debt more than quadrupled in households headed by people aged 65 to 74 in that period (from $10,150 to $45,000 per household, on average), and for those 75 and up it has increased sevenfold (from just under $5,000 to $36,000).
Older adults are also considerably more likely to have debt now than they were a generation ago. Fifty-three percent of households headed by someone 75-plus had debt in 2022, compared to 32 percent in 1992. For the population at large, the increase was just a few percentage points.
“There are a lot of folks who just don’t have enough money put away,” says Jason Athas, manager of educational programs at Debt Management Credit Counseling Corp., a Florida-based nonprofit that provides debt relief and counseling services.
As a result, he says, he is seeing more older adults struggling to keep up with their costs. Research by AARP and others bears him out.
An October 2023 AARP study found that 65 percent of people 65 and older who have debt consider it a problem, including 29 percent who call it a major problem. According to a July 2024 report from the Nationwide Retirement Institute, a research and consulting arm of the insurance company, nearly a third of retirees expect to be less financially secure in retirement than their parents or grandparents.
“Credit card debt is one of the biggest problems seniors have today,” Athas says.
Inflation impact
Household debt among those 75 and older has declined since 2010, when it more than doubled to nearly $41,000 on average in the wake of the Great Recession, according to the SCF, which the Fed conducts every three years. Their debt had declined sharply by 2013 but has risen steadily since, subsequent surveys showed.
Runaway inflation in 2021 and 2022, and the Federal Reserve’s campaign to tamp it down by sharply raising interest rates, have played a part, financial professionals say.
“We’re all impacted by the accelerated cost of living,” says Hector Madueno, financial education manager at SAFE Credit Union in Northern California.
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