Household Net Worth chart for Young Professionals 31 years old

31-years-old-young-professionals-net-worth-household-chart
Average net worth for 31 year old household
For most 31 year old household in America, net worth measurements fall between $21,624 and $154,454 USD. The median net worth for household in this age group is $61,782 USD, according to the Federal Reserve's 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances and anonymized data from  NettleWorth.com users.
31-years-old-young-professionals-net-worth-household-chart

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Chart Insights

Is your household's net worth tracking with the life you are building together? The median net worth for 31-year-old households stands at $61,800, with most households in this group holding between $21,600 at the 25th percentile and $154,500 at the 75th percentile. The gap between the 25th and 75th percentile at this age reflects the dramatic divergence in financial outcomes that the thirties typically produce: some are homeowners with equity, others are carrying significant debt, and the compounding effect of either direction is becoming visible. The average net worth is considerably higher than the median at $123,600, driven by a relatively small number of exceptionally wealthy households whose financial circumstances - large inherited estates, successful business sales, or decades of high-income accumulation - are not representative of where most 31-year-old households actually stand. NettleWorth uses the median to give your household the most honest and grounded benchmark available: the exact midpoint where half of your peer households hold more and half hold less, without distortion from outliers whose reality has no bearing on yours.

Milestones and Peer Comparisons

At 31, most households are navigating the complexity that defines financial life in the thirties: mortgage payments, childcare costs, career advancement, and the coordinated management of growing retirement portfolios. For households with two earners, the combined income and savings rate is the single most powerful driver of net worth growth in this decade. A household net worth around $61,800 is typical for 31-year-old households; those above $154,500 have typically benefited from consistent savings, meaningful home equity, and limited high-interest debt. Having a net worth around $61,800 places your household right at the median for 31-year-old households, while a net worth above $154,500 puts your household in the top quarter of your household's age group.

Tips and Growth Factors

At 31, most households are managing the most financially complex period of their lives: rising incomes, growing family costs, and the compounding of earlier financial decisions becoming increasingly visible. The wealth-building priority is maintaining high savings rates despite the lifestyle pressure that comes with increased income. Continue contributing 15% or more of combined income to retirement accounts, direct mortgage extra payments toward building equity faster, and begin the financial conversations about whether tax diversification - balancing pre-tax 401(k) contributions with after-tax Roth accounts - makes sense for your household's long-term tax strategy. If you have children, starting a 529 plan early maximizes the tax-advantaged growth available for education expenses. Households that enter their forties with a net worth above $154,500 typically did so by maintaining savings discipline through the expensive thirties rather than waiting for costs to decrease before saving seriously.

Data Sources and Methodology

All statistics on this page are derived from reputable sources, including the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, anonymized data from NettleWorth users, and our own research.

Net worth percentiles presented on this page are generated using a robust, age-based modeling framework designed to reflect realistic patterns of wealth accumulation throughout the lifespan. The approach applies a double exponential smoothing technique, calibrated to match Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances data. Our data spans the earning and retirement life stages from adolescence through late retirement. We use a range of separate percentiles (from the 2nd to the 99th) that are calculated for every age and demographic group, with demographic adjustments built into the model to reflect currently observed population-level trends.

Primary data sources include the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances (2022 release), Distributional Financial Accounts, IRS Personal Wealth Statistics, and leading financial research from the Federal Reserve, IRS, and Vanguard. Net worth figures are specified for U.S. residents in USD and follow the original percentile structure used in our calculations.

Further details on our assumptions and our transparent methodology are described in our documentation for those seeking deeper insight into the modeling process and its limitations. Get in touch to discuss further or if you believe an error has been made somewhere.

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