US household debt hits all-time high at $18.2 trillion after a $167 billion surge in Q1

By: bitcoin ethereum news|2025/05/16 01:15:05
0
Share
copy
US household debt ballooned by $167 billion in the first quarter of 2025, bringing the total to a record $18.2 trillion, according to the New York Federal Reserve’s latest report. Compared to ten years ago, the overall debt held by households has grown by $7 trillion, piling onto families who are already stretched thin. This quarter’s sharp rise came mostly from mortgage debt, which spiked by $199 billion, pushing it to a staggering $12.8 trillion. Total debt balance and its composition | Source: New York Fed Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax – posted by @KobeissiLetter At the same time, student loan balances increased by $16 billion, hitting $1.6 trillion, another record high. Not everything went up, though. Auto loan debt dropped $13 billion, now at $1.6 trillion, and credit card balances fell $29 billion, down to $1.2 trillion. Still, the total load is heavier than it’s ever been, and it’s clear more people are locked into long-term debt with no easy exit. Mortgage pressure rises as affordable housing stays out of reach The current housing disaster started in the early pandemic years. Mortgage rates hit historic lows, and that sent buyers racing to lock down properties. That scramble didn’t let up. With demand so high and supply so low, prices climbed fast. By March this year, home prices across the country were 39% higher than they were in March 2019, based on the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index. Even now, prices are still rising. And though more homes are finally hitting the market, the supply is growing in the wrong places, mostly in higher price brackets. Meanwhile, homes in the lower and middle ranges, the ones most people actually need, are still hard to find. That has left home sales in those price tiers lagging while expensive listings keep moving. A detailed report by the National Association of Realtors and Realtor.com tried to make sense of who can actually afford what. They focused on buyers using a standard 30-year fixed mortgage and calculated what listings would be affordable if no more than 30% of income went to the mortgage, taxes, and insurance. It’s a grim picture. Households earning between $75,000 and $100,000 saw the biggest jump in available, affordable homes—though that only meant an increase from 20.8% of listings in March 2024 to 21.2% in March 2025. In March 2019, that same income bracket could afford 48.8% of listings. The report said a truly balanced market would mean this group should be able to afford 48% of available homes. To reach that point now, there would need to be 416,000 more homes listed at or below $255,000. Lower-income buyers left behind as inequality deepens Things get worse lower down the income ladder. A household earning $50,000 could afford just 8.7% of homes for sale in March. That’s a drop from 9.4% a year earlier and way below the 27.8% back in March 2019. Buyers earning $250,000 or more? They have access to at least 80% of the market. Danielle said most of the improvement in home supply happened in the Midwest and South, where cities like Akron, St. Louis, and Pittsburgh now have enough inventory to meet demand. Other areas—Raleigh, Des Moines, and Grand Rapids—have improved, but they’re not quite there yet. But across the country’s top 100 metro markets, 40% are still struggling. Places like Seattle and Washington, D.C. have seen some growth in affordable listings, but buyers there still need to earn over $150,000 just to afford half of the homes available. Markets like Austin, San Francisco, and Denver–once overheated–are now seeing better affordability. The report said that with the right mix of construction, demand changes, and local policies, progress is possible. “It tells us that with the right mix of new construction, market shifts, and local policy efforts, even some of the most challenging markets can start to bend toward balance,” the report said. KEY Difference Wire helps crypto brands break through and dominate headlines fast Source: https://www.cryptopolitan.com/us-household-debt-ath-at-18-2-trillion/

You may also like

Particle Founder: The entrepreneurial insights I have gained the most from in the past year

Stop lean startup, stop lightning entrepreneurship, and think carefully about what your product aspirations are.

Huang Renxun's latest podcast transcript: The future of Nvidia, the development of embodied intelligence and agents, the explosion of inference demand, and the public relations crisis of artificial intelligence

The competition in the future is not just about whose model is larger or whose computing power is stronger, but also about who understands the industry better, who can embed AI more deeply into real processes, and who can organize these capabilities into a runnable and scalable system.

OKX Ventures Research Report: AI Agent Economic Infrastructure Research Report (Part 1)

The existing infrastructure is hostile to the Agent economy. Agents can think and act independently at the "capability level," but at the "economic level," they are still locked into infrastructure designed for humans.

The migration of settlement rights: B18 and the institutional starting point of on-chain banks

In the traditional system, banks decide the settlement; in the on-chain system, code begins to take over this responsibility.

From Tencent and Circle: Looking at the Simple and Difficult Questions of Investment

The AI narrative continues to ferment, but the recent performance of related stocks varies, with some in the midst of summer and others as if in winter.

The second half of stablecoins no longer belongs to the crypto circle

What Coinbase doesn't want, Mastercard is eager to buy.

Popular coins

Latest Crypto News

Read more