Americans now carry a record $1.28 trillion in credit card debt. Nearly half carry a balance month to month. One in five says they will never pay it off. Meanwhile worker productivity has grown 80% since 1979 -- pay grew 29%. The math was done to you.
Americans now carry a record $1.277 trillion in credit card debt -- the highest since the Federal Reserve Bank of New York began tracking in 1999. That is a 66% increase since Q1 2021. Balances have risen every single Q4 since the Great Recession.
Nearly half of all cardholders (47%) carry a balance from month to month as of late 2025 -- up from 39% in December 2021. Of those carrying balances, 61% have been in debt for at least a year. The average APR hit 20.97%. Banks expanded their profit spread -- the gap between what they pay to borrow and what they charge consumers -- from 8.2% in 2007 to 17.1% by end of 2025. When the Fed cut rates, banks kept APRs high. One in five (22%) credit card debtors says they will never pay it off.
What is driving the debt? Not luxury spending. 41% of debtors cite an emergency expense -- medical bills, car repairs, home repairs. Another 33% cite day-to-day expenses like groceries, childcare, and utilities. Americans are not charging vacations. They are surviving.
Credit card debt is only the most visible piece. Americans are buried under layers that the mainstream conversation rarely reaches -- what analysts call the "shadow debt" ecosystem: medical bills, student loans, buy-now-pay-later traps, and informal debts that never show up in official statistics.
Medical debt is uniquely American. In 2024, 36% of U.S. households had medical debt. The CFPB estimated Americans owed $220 billion in medical debt in 2024 -- and about 40% of all Americans owe some form when credit card debt used to pay medical bills and family loans are included. For Black and Hispanic households, the burden is significantly higher.
Student loans represent another $1.6 trillion in national debt. After the pandemic-era reporting pause ended in late 2024, serious delinquencies (90+ days late) skyrocketed to 8.04%. A Federal Reserve analysis found 1.2 million borrowers saw credit scores drop 100+ points virtually overnight. Those borrowers now face higher rates or denial for mortgages, car loans, and new credit -- compounding the original harm.
The racial wealth gap in America is not the product of different spending habits. It is the product of over 400 years of deliberate, documented policy -- from slavery to redlining to predatory lending to incarceration -- that systematically prevented Black wealth from accumulating while subsidizing white wealth through homeownership programs, GI Bills, and inheritance.
From 2019 to 2022, the mean net worth gap between Black and white households grew by 38% -- from $841,900 to $1.15 million -- not because Black households lost ground, but because the absolute dollar-value of white wealth growth vastly exceeded Black gains. White households hold 80% of all U.S. wealth while comprising 65% of households. Black households make up 13.6% of households and hold just 4.7% of all wealth.
The homeownership gap is central. Homes are how most Americans build wealth -- but redlining denied Black Americans access to mortgages in appreciating neighborhoods for decades. Black homeownership remains below 50% nationally -- the only racial group under that threshold. In 2020, the 400 richest Americans held more total wealth than all 10 million Black American households combined.