What's Your Net Worth Telling You? (2024)

A net worth calculation is like GPS for your retirement savings. It tells you where you are now and which way you need to go to get to your destination. For instance, calculating your current net worth can help you keep your retirement plans moving in the right direction.

Key Takeaways

  • Calculating your net worth involves adding up all of your assets and subtracting out all of your debts.
  • There's no hard rule for determining your ideal net worth.
  • You should know if your net worth is headed in the right direction, toward a comfortable future. If it's not, it's time to cut your spending, reduce your debt, or both.

How to Calculate Your Net Worth

Net worth is simply the total dollar value of all assets minus all liabilities. It's a benchmark for measuring financial health that is applied to companies as well as individuals. The formula is a simple one:

NetWorth=AssetsLiabilities\begin{aligned} &\text{Net Worth} = \text{Assets} - \text{Liabilities} \\ \end{aligned}NetWorth=AssetsLiabilities

That's just two columns of numbers. Here's what goes into each column.

Assets

There are liquid assets and illiquid assets. Liquid assets are investments or possessions that can be turned into cash relatively quickly with little or no loss of value. Bank accounts, certificates of deposit, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and similar investments fall into this category.

Illiquid assets are investments or possessions that are difficult to convert into cash quickly. If you own your home, it's an illiquid asset, as are any other real estate holdings, the balance in a retirement savings plan, and partnerships in businesses. They are not easy to convert to cash.

Most personal property, such as vehicles, furniture, and clothing, should be left out of your net worth calculation. Even if they cost a lot to acquire, their resale value may be unknown. However, investment-quality art, jewelry, and collectibles might be considered assets.

Liabilities

The other side of the ledger lists your debts. Credit card balances, car loans, home mortgages, student debt, and business loans all fall into this category. Personal loans count, too.

Add up all of your assets, subtract the total of your liabilities, and you've got your current net worth.

Where Do You Stand?

You may be interested in comparing your net worth to the figures in the chart below. The chart features the median and mean net worth of all Americans by age group, compiled by the Federal Reserve Board's Division of Research and Statistics. The median is the middle number. Half have less net worth, and half have more net worth. The mean number is the average net worth.

Don't place too much importance on your net worth in comparison with these numbers. This is national data with no demographic breakdown.

Age of PersonMedianMean
Less than 35$39.0$183.5
35-44$135.6$549.6
45-54$247.2$975.8
55-64$364.5$1,566.9
65-74$409.9$1,794.6
75 or more$335.6$1,624.1

Note the big differences in mean and median net worth in each age category. Remember that the mean number is the average number. A relatively few very affluent people can skew the average. That may be why the mean net worth of Americans younger than age 35 tops $183,000.

The Ideal Number

What should your net worth be? Every person has a unique lifestyle and individual expectations, so there is no one-size-fits-all, universally agreed-upon number. That said, Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko, authors of "The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy" have offered this formula as rule of thumb:

NetWorth=Age×PretaxIncome10\begin{aligned} &\text{Net Worth} = \frac{ \text{Age} \times \text{Pretax Income} }{ 10 } \\ \end{aligned}NetWorth=10Age×PretaxIncome

Your annual household pretax income multiplied by your age, then divided by 10, equals "what your net worth should be," according to Stanley and Danko.

Using this formula with a basic salary of $25,000, we get the following results:

AgeIncomeNet Worth
20$25,000$50,000
30$25,000$75,000
40$25,000$100,000
50$25,000$125,000
60$25,000$150,000

The numbers in the middle-age ranges might look feasible, but the formula is less likely to work for people just starting out in life. Few 20-year-olds have racked up $50,000.

Then again, most professionals, if all goes well, see a steady increase in salary over the years. Below, the same formula is used with higher incomes for older ages:

AgeIncomeNet Worth
20$25,000$50,000
30$35,000$105,000
40$45,000$180,000
50$55,000$275,000
60$65,000$390,000

The net worth estimates are still unrealistic for very young workers, and they're not great for people approaching their retirement years. Still, the numbers may provide a benchmark for consideration. This may help you tell if you are at least moving in the right direction.

One formula suggests that your net worth at age 72 should be 20 times your annual spending.

Interestingly, under the scenario where income rises with age, the net worth estimate delivers results similar to those generated by a formula devised by David John Marotta, a financial advisor.

Marotta recommends following a savings plan that will result in a net worth that, by age 72, is 20 times your annual spending. Under this plan, the older you get, the more you save. Since most people earn more as they grow older, this is not unrealistic.

AgeIncomeAnnual Spending Saved
Annual SpendingNet Worth*
30$25,0001x$15,000$15,000
35$35,0002x$20,000$40,000
42$50,0004x$35,000$140,000
51$55,0008x$40,000$320,000
66$75,00016x$50,000$800,000

How Do I Calculate Net Worth?

To calculate your net worth, subtract your liabilities from your assets. So your net worth equals your assets minus your liabilities.

What Should My Net Worth Be at 30?

Determining what your net worth should be at any age can be a bit tricky, and it depends on your income.

According to "The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy" by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko, you can calculate your ideal net worth in two steps. First, multiply your age by your pretax income. Then divide that number by 10.

Say you're 30 years old and your income is $50,000 per year. Your net worth should be $150,000, according to this formula. A $25,000 salary at age 30 would mean an ideal net worth of $75,000.

Is a Net Worth of 500K Good?

Answering whether your net worth is good depends on your age and your income. It also depends on whether you want to compare yourself to other people, or to what experts recommend is an ideal net worth, using a formula. Using a rule of thumb from "The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy" by Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko, you can input your age and pretax income to determine how your net worth stacks up. If you're 60 years old and making $100,000 per year, a net worth of $500,000 is below the ideal, which would be $600,000. (According to Stanley and Danko, an ideal net worth equals your age multiplied by your pretax income, divided by 10.) For anyone 50 and younger making that salary (or less), a $500,000 net worth is good.

Where Should I Be Financially at 35?

Fidelity recommends that you have about two times your salary saved by age 35.

Here's the breakdown:

By age 30 | Save at least 1x your salary

By age 40 | Save at least 3x your salary

By age 50 | Save at least 6x your salary

By age 60 | Save at least 8x your salary

By age 67 | Save at least 10x your salary

The Bottom Line

Formulas and averages can provide some insight into the issue of net worth, but absolute truths are harder to reach. At the most basic level, a positive net worth is better than a negative net worth, and a higher net worth is better than a lower net worth.

If your net worth is negative, strive to get it to a positive number. You're spending more than you earn. So make a budget, cut your spending, and pay off debts.

Even if your net worth is low, you can strive to build your net worth through saving and investing, a little at a time. Focus on maximizing the amount you save and minimizing the amount you spend. If your net worth is high, keep building on the momentum. You're working towards a real improvement in lifestyle: enough money to live well during your retirement years.

Article Sources

Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in oureditorial policy.

  1. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Changes in U.S. Family Finances From 2019 to 2022."

  2. Thomas J. Stanley and William D. Danko Jr. "The Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy," Page 13. Taylor Trade Publishing, 1996.

  3. Marotta Wealth Management. "Compute Your Net Worth Once a Year – 2006."

  4. Fidelity. "How Much Do I Need to Retire?"

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What's Your Net Worth Telling You? (2024)

FAQs

What's Your Net Worth Telling You? ›

A net worth calculation is like GPS for your retirement savings. It tells you where you are now and which way you need to go to get to your destination. For instance, calculating your current net worth can help you keep your retirement plans

retirement plans
The process of creating a retirement plan includes identifying your income sources, adding up your expenses, putting a savings plan into effect, and managing your assets. By estimating your future cash flows, you can judge whether your retirement income goal is realistic.
https://www.investopedia.com › terms › retirement-planning
moving in the right direction.

What does determining your net worth tell you? ›

It lets you understand your current financial situation. It gives you a reference point for measuring progress toward your goals.

How do you answer what is your net worth? ›

The basic formula to calculate your net worth is to add up all of your assets, and then add up all of your liabilities. Once you have those two numbers, subtract your liabilities from your assets.

Is your net worth how rich you are? ›

The main measure of wealth is net worth: the total value of your household's assets (like houses and savings), minus debts (like mortgages and student loans).

What should my net worth be at my age? ›

Average net worth by age
Age by decadeAverage net worthMedian net worth
20s$99,272$6,980
30s$277,788$34,691
40s$713,796$126,881
50s$1,310,775$292,085
4 more rows

What is a respectable net worth? ›

Determining what your net worth should be at any age can be a bit tricky, and it depends on your income. Say you're 30 years old and your income is $50,000 per year. Your net worth should be $150,000, according to this formula. A $25,000 salary at age 30 would mean an ideal net worth of $75,000.

Is a house included in net worth? ›

Your net worth is what you own minus what you owe. It's the total value of all your assets—including your house, cars, investments and cash—minus your liabilities (things like credit card debt, student loans, and what you still owe on your mortgage).

Does a 401k count as net worth? ›

Yes. The value of your 401(k) account is a part of your net worth and should be included in your net worth. Like anything else of financial value, the vested balance of your 401(k) account — or any retirement account, for that matter — is considered an asset.

What is the average net worth of a person? ›

The average American net worth is $1,063,700, as of 2022. Net worth averages increase with age from $183,500 for those 35 and under to $1,794,600 for those 65 to 74. Net worth, however, tends to drop for those 75 and older.

Is your net worth all your money? ›

Net worth is the value of all assets, minus the total of all liabilities. Put another way, net worth is what is owned minus what is owed.

What salary is considered rich? ›

According to IRS standards, a monthly income of approximately $45,000 qualifies someone as wealthy. However, if you're aiming for the top 1% as measured by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), you'd need to earn about $68,277 monthly.

What net worth is upper class? ›

With that in mind, a net worth of $604,900 would put you in the upper 25% of American households and having $1 million or more should make you firmly a member of the upper class. Of course, it's important to remember that net worth is calculated by adding up your assets and then subtracting your liabilities.

What is the top 5% net worth? ›

The most recent data from the Fed's Survey of Consumer Finances took a snapshot of the American public at the end of 2022. At that point, a net worth of $3,795,000 was enough to put you in the top 5% of all American households.

What is the net worth of the top 1%? ›

In the U.S., it may take you $5.81 million to be in the top 1%, but it takes a minimum net worth of $30 million to be considered among the ultra-high net worth crowd. As of the end of 2023, this ultra-high net worth population is on the rise, reaching 626,000 globally, up from just over 600,000 a year earlier.

How many Americans live paycheck to paycheck? ›

Our survey revealed that over 66% of Americans report living paycheck to paycheck. A recent Bureau of Labor Statistics weekly earnings report indicated a 3.5% year-over-year increase in median weekly earnings for the first quarter of 2024.

Where should you be financially at 35? ›

One common benchmark is to have two times your annual salary in net worth by age 35. So, for example, say that you earn the U.S. median income of $74,500. This means that you will want to have $740,500 saved up by age 67. To reach this goal, at age 35 you may want to have about $149,000 in savings.

Why is it important to calculate net worth? ›

Your net worth provides a snapshot of your financial situation at this point in time. If you calculate your net worth today, you will see the end result of everything you've earned and everything you've spent up until right now.

What does the net worth represent? ›

Net worth is the value of a person or company and can be computed by deducting the total liabilities from the total assets that are owned by the individual/company. If an individual or company owns assets that are greater than liabilities, it is said to show a positive net worth.

What should be your net worth at 40? ›

According to the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, published in October 2023, the median net worth for someone aged 35 to 44 is $135, while for someone in the 45 to 54 age group, it was $247,200.

What is a good net worth at 25? ›

The Average Net Worth At Age 25

$9,000 for ages 25-34. $52,000 for ages 35-44, $100,000 for ages 45-54. $180,000 for ages 55-64. $232,000+ for 65+

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