Reporting from Chicago, FOX Business correspondent Kelly Saberi captured a familiar January pledge with fresh urgency: Americans plan to save more and trim waste in 2026. The focus, she noted, is on building cash cushions and reining in small, everyday splurges that add up. The push reflects a broader reset as families face tight budgets, high borrowing costs, and lingering price pressures.
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ToggleWhy Resolutions Are Shifting
Financial resolutions have long topped New Year lists, but the priorities are changing. After years of higher prices for essentials, many households want better control of monthly cash flow. Savings that grew earlier in the decade have thinned for some people. Credit balances rose for others. The new aim is simple: keep more money on hand and spend with intent.
Advisers say the psychology matters. People tend to overshoot in January and stall by spring. This year, many are setting fewer goals but treating them like must-do items. The tone is practical, not flashy.
The Core Message From Chicago
“Saving more and reducing frivolous spending,” Saberi said, summing up the goals many consumers shared for the year ahead.
That line echoes a national mood. While paychecks have grown for some workers, steady bills still bite. Cutting takeout meals, unused subscriptions, and impulse buys has become the first move. Small trims can free cash for savings or debt payments without major lifestyle changes.
What Households Say They Will Change
Many consumers are targeting routine leaks in their budgets before tackling bigger items. The idea is to make savings automatic and spending visible.
- Automate transfers to savings the day paychecks arrive.
- Cancel or pause subscriptions that no longer get use.
- Track spending in one place for 30 days to spot habits.
- Pay down high-interest balances first to cut interest costs.
- Plan low-cost swaps, like cooking at home two extra nights a week.
Some plan to redirect any windfalls, such as tax refunds, to emergency funds or debt. Others are putting guardrails on social spending by setting monthly caps for dining out and entertainment.
Debt, Rates, and the Cost of Waiting
High-interest balances are a growing worry. The math is simple and unforgiving. Interest compounds fast, and delaying payments can turn a small balance into a long-term drain. That is why many people rank debt payoff just after saving for emergencies. Every dollar saved in interest is a dollar earned without extra work.
Refinancing or consolidating can help if fees are low and terms are clear. But the first step is often cutting new charges. People who stop adding to balances give themselves a chance to make progress.
Building a Safety Net
An emergency fund remains the cornerstone of financial stability. Many planners suggest setting aside enough to cover several months of essential expenses. For those starting from zero, smaller goals help. Even $25 a week becomes meaningful over a year. Automatic transfers remove the guesswork and reduce the urge to skip a deposit.
Workers with access to retirement plans say they will try to maintain contributions, even while saving more for near-term needs. Some plan to increase contributions by one percentage point after paying down a card or receiving a raise.
Balancing Wants and Needs
The trick is avoiding burnout. People report better success when they carve out a small, guilt-free spending line rather than cutting everything at once. That keeps motivation up while longer-term habits take hold. It also reduces the chance of a binge that erases weeks of progress.
Families are also sharing goals at the dinner table. When everyone knows the plan, it is easier to say no to extras and yes to the bigger target, like a paid-off card or a funded emergency account.
What To Watch Next
Several forces will shape how these plans fare. Prices for basics will influence how much cash people can save. Job growth and wages will determine whether households feel safe putting more aside. Borrowing costs will affect the payoff math for credit card and personal loan balances. Clarity on these fronts could help families stick with their plans past February.
For now, the message from Chicago is clear and grounded. Americans want to save more, waste less, and keep choices simple. The first test arrives in the next few pay cycles. If automatic savings and tighter budgets hold, 2026 could be the year many households trade impulse buys for lasting stability. The smart move is to start small, stick with it, and review the plan monthly. Momentum, not perfection, will decide the results.







