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More Americans Live Paycheck to Paycheck

americans living paycheck to paycheck
americans living paycheck to paycheck

Almost one in four U.S. households is living paycheck to paycheck in 2025, according to new research from the Bank of America Institute, a sign that rising prices are still squeezing family budgets even as the job market holds up.

The report says the share has risen from last year as inflation outpaces wage gains. The finding lands at a delicate moment for consumers, retailers, and the Federal Reserve, which is weighing the risk of cooling demand against the cost of stubborn prices.

“A new Bank of America Institute report shows 24% of U.S. households live paycheck to paycheck in 2025, up from last year as inflation continues to outpace wages.”

Why Budgets Are Tightening

The core dynamic is simple and harsh: prices climbed faster than paychecks. When inflation grows quicker than wages, purchasing power erodes. Even small gaps add up over a year, especially for essentials like groceries, rent, and utilities.

Households that built savings during the pandemic have drawn them down. Many used that cushion to manage higher costs in 2023 and 2024. By 2025, thinner savings leave less room for surprise expenses.

Credit use is also part of the picture. Federal Reserve data through 2024 showed rising credit card balances and an uptick in delinquencies among younger and lower-income borrowers. Higher interest rates make carrying those balances more expensive, deepening the strain.

Who Feels the Strain

Living paycheck to paycheck spans incomes, but pressure lands hardest on workers with hourly wages and families facing rent resets. People with variable schedules and limited access to paid time off are more vulnerable to sudden costs.

Parents with school-age children are juggling rising fees, child care costs, and food prices. Renters face less flexibility than homeowners who locked in low mortgage rates earlier in the decade. For many, there is not much room to cut.

  • Essential costs like housing and food take a larger share of income.
  • High-rate debt leaves less left over after minimum payments.
  • Irregular hours make budgeting harder and savings less likely.

Spending, Retail, and the Wider Economy

Consumer spending drives much of U.S. growth. A larger paycheck-to-paycheck population can slow discretionary purchases, even if jobs remain plentiful. That matters for retailers, restaurants, and travel companies that depend on impulse buys and add-ons.

Discount chains and private-label brands often gain when budgets tighten. Mid-market retailers can get squeezed as shoppers trade down. Services tied to big-ticket items, from furniture to appliances, may see softer demand if households delay replacements.

Banks will watch credit quality closely. More strained budgets can mean higher late payments, especially on credit cards and auto loans. Lenders may tighten standards, which can further cool spending.

How Policy and Pay Might Shift the Trend

The path forward hinges on three variables: inflation, wages, and borrowing costs. If price growth slows faster than wages rise, the squeeze could ease in the second half of the year. If not, paycheck-to-paycheck living may spread.

The labor market remains key. Steady hiring and even modest wage gains can help households catch up. But if job growth slows, the cushion gets thinner. On rates, any Federal Reserve cuts would take time to filter into lower borrowing costs, and credit card APRs might remain high for a while.

What the 24% Tells Us

The 24% figure is a warning light, not a forecast of a downturn. It signals that a significant slice of the country is one missed shift or surprise bill away from trouble. It also shows how uneven the recovery from high inflation has been.

Some households, especially those with fixed-rate mortgages and higher incomes, have adjusted. Others are still catching up after two years in which prices outran pay. The gap shapes not only spending patterns but also public views on the economy.

What to Watch Next

Several markers will show whether the pressure is easing:

  • Inflation readings for food, rent, and utilities.
  • Wage growth for lower-wage sectors like retail and hospitality.
  • Credit card delinquencies and savings-rate data.
  • Retailer earnings commentary on trade-down trends.

The bottom line: more Americans are walking a financial tightrope in 2025. If inflation cools and pay keeps rising, the strain could lift by year’s end. If not, expect slower discretionary spending, tighter credit, and a careful consumer. That restraint may be exactly what cools prices, but it comes with a cost for households already stretched thin.

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Brad Anderson is News Editor for Due. Guest contributor to CNBC, CNN and ABC4. His writing career has ranged the spectrum, from niche blogs to MIT Labs. He started several companies and failed, then learned from his mistakes to have multiple successful exits. Whether it’s helping someone overcome barriers or covering an innovative startup everyone should know about, Brad’s focus is to make a difference through the content he develops and oversees. Pitch Financial News Articles here: [email protected]
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