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If crossing the millionaire threshold meant champagne and caviar, most Americans would be popping corks by now. But instead of celebrating, they’re standing in the checkout line doing mental math on eggs, wondering how net worth numbers hit seven figures while their fridge stays suspiciously empty.
According to the Federal Reserve’s 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances, the average household in the U.S. has a net worth of $1.06 million. That sounds impressive — until you realize it’s wildly inflated by a small number of ultra-wealthy households.
The median net worth? Just $192,900.
In other words, half of U.S. households have less than $192K to their name — including the house, the car, the 401(k), and the Honda with 147,000 miles. That gap between average and median is the economic version of a funhouse mirror: the reflection looks rich, but the reality feels pretty cramped.
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Net worth is just your assets minus your liabilities. It’s the value of what you own minus what you owe. According to the Fed, assets include:
Cash (checking, savings, money market)
Investment accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s, stocks, bonds)
Real estate (your home, rental properties)
Vehicles (cars, boats, motorcycles, maybe even a helicopter)
Life insurance and annuities with cash value
Liabilities? That’s your mortgage, car loans, student debt, credit card balances, and other IOUs.
So yes, technically, if you’ve got a paid-off house, a couple of retirement accounts, and no debt, you could easily be in that “millionaire household” bracket — even if you’re still buying store-brand cereal and hoping your tires last another year.
Sure, the Fed says we’re richer on paper. But that paper doesn’t cover groceries.
Housing prices have climbed again. Zillow says the average U.S. home value is now $363,505, up 0.2% in the past year. First-time buyers? Good luck. The average age of a homebuyer is now 56, according to the National Association of Realtors. That’s not a typo. People are buying homes later than ever because prices are outpacing paychecks.
Speaking of sticker shock, Kelley Blue Book reports the average new car now costs $48,039 — nearly the same as the U.S. median income.
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