How Much Money Does It Take to Be Considered Wealthy in America?

A new survey suggests that number is $2.2 million — but people are defining wealth differently

A person displaying dollar bills. A new survey suggests Americans define wealth has having an average of $2.2 million

Gonna need a few more hundos

By Kirk Miller

For Americans, the definition of wealthy is currently sitting at $2.2 million, according to Charles Schwab’s 2023 Modern Wealth Survey (per Bloomberg). Around 1,000 survey respondents, when asked to express how much money it takes to be considered “wealthy” in this country, said it’s an average of $2.2 million.

But other numbers in the survey suggest that Americans appreciate far more important things than money. When asked what wealth means to them, 70% of respondents picked “enjoying experiences” over “owning nice things.” As well, 48% of Americans surveyed who say they already feel wealthy today had an average net worth of “just” $560,000, or about one-quarter of the loftier target.

Daniel Craig Plans to “Give Away” His Wealth, Calling Inheritances “Quite Distasteful”
After raking in tens of millions as James Bond, the actor stands to make even more in the future

“Americans today aren’t as worried about keeping up with the Joneses, and more importantly, they understand that they can be happier with fulfilling experiences and relationships, even if they have less money than them,” said Jonathan Craig, managing director and head of investor services at Charles Schwab.

A few other findings:

Thankfully, overall numbers suggest that people much prefer to not stress over money versus having “more” money than friends or achieving a healthy work-life balance over maximizing earnings. Good health, healthy relationships and work flexibility also took precedence over success, amount of money or high salary, particularly among older generations.

The lesson here? Money may be less important to older generations — but they’re also the people who probably have more savings and, particularly among Boomers, had more affordable housing and less debt than younger generations.

Exit mobile version