Generation X (Gen X), typically those aged 45-60, consistently carries the highest average credit card debt in the U.S., with recent data showing balances around $9,600 in 2025, significantly more than Millennials or Baby Boomers, often due to peak earning years coinciding with major expenses like mortgages. While younger adults have rising balances, Gen X faces growing debt with potentially shrinking incomes, squeezing finances as they approach retirement.
People ages 40-49 tend to carry the highest average debt, largely because of home mortgages and other long-term loans. Not all debt is bad debt. Mortgages and student loans are considered better forms of debt than credit cards and auto loans.
The credit limit you can expect for a $70,000 salary across all your credit cards could be as much as $14000 to $21000, or even higher in some cases, according to our research. The exact amount depends heavily on multiple factors, like your credit score and how many credit lines you have open.
Younger age groups carry higher debt levels: Gen Z averages $23,888 in debt, Millennials about $18,135, while Baby Boomers average much less at around $7,173.
Generation X Owe the Most, and It's Not Even Close
That's more than the balances of all other generations, and more than 50% higher than average debts of all consumers.
Michael Sheen has written off £1 million ($1.29 million) of debt for 900 people using £100,000 ($129,000) of his own money. The Welsh star, famed for roles in Good Omens, Twilight and more recently, A Very Royal Scandal, has started a debt acquisition company to help the group in his native south Wales.
Baby Boomers faced high inflation and interest rates but could access affordable housing. Gen X navigated economic uncertainty but still found reasonable property prices. Gen Y pioneered the digital economy while watching housing slip away. Gen Z inherits technological advantages but faces unprecedented housing costs.
While exact real-time figures vary, recent analyses suggest hundreds of thousands of Australians hold over $1 million in superannuation, though it's a minority, with estimates from around 2021 pointing to over 400,000 people, a number that has grown significantly due to investment returns, though many still don't reach this milestone. About 2.5% of the population held >$1 million in super as of mid-2021 (around 417,000 people), with forecasts indicating a larger number, while projections suggest over 10% of women and 15% of men retiring by 2060 could reach this goal, and recent studies highlight that a large majority (around 94%) of retirees don't hit $1 million.
U.S. consumers carry $6,501 in credit card debt on average, according to Experian data, but if your balance is much higher—say, $20,000 or beyond—you may feel hopeless. Paying off a high credit card balance can be a daunting task, but it is possible.
The average age to pay off a mortgage in Australia has risen significantly, with estimates placing it between 60 and 65, often extending into retirement, up from around 52 in the 1980s, due to higher house prices and later first-home purchases, with many Australians now facing debt into their 60s and even 70s, making debt-free retirement a challenge.
How Much You Should Spend With a $20,000 Credit Limit. Spending between $200 and $2,000 per month is best for your credit score. You should avoid having a balance above $6,000 when your monthly statement gets generated.
The 2/3/4 Rule is an informal guideline, primarily used by Bank of America, that limits how many new credit cards you can be approved for: two in a two-month (or 30-day) period, three in a 12-month period, and four in a 24-month period, helping lenders manage risk from frequent applications and "churning" for bonuses. It's a rule for applicants, not a limit on how many cards you should have, but a strategy for managing applications to avoid automatic denials.
If you're just starting out, a good credit limit for your first card might be around $1,000. If you have built up a solid credit history, a steady income and a good credit score, your credit limit may increase to $5,000 or $10,000 or more — plenty of credit to ensure you can purchase big ticket items.
What it means to have a credit score of 800. A credit score of 800 means you have an exceptional credit score, according to Experian. According to a report by FICO, only 23% of the scorable population has a credit score of 800 or above.
DTI over 43% is typically considered too high by most lenders and may signal you're carrying more debt than you can comfortably manage. Types of debt also matter. High-interest consumer debts (like credit cards) are riskier than low-interest ones (like mortgages or student loans).
If you can manage to rid yourself of debt by age 50, you'll be setting the stage for a financially healthy retirement. If you manage to pay off by then, you'll have several years to put your savings to your retirement funds, laying the groundwork for a comfortable life once you quit working.
Generally speaking, negative information such as late or missed payments, accounts that have been sent to collection agencies, accounts not being paid as agreed, or bankruptcies stays on credit reports for approximately seven years.
The 2-2-2 credit rule is a guideline lenders use to assess a borrower's creditworthiness, requiring two active revolving credit accounts, open for at least two years, with a history of on-time payments for those two consecutive years, often with a minimum limit of $2,000 per account, to show financial stability for larger loans like mortgages. It demonstrates you can handle multiple credit lines responsibly, not just have a good score, building lender confidence.
The "15" and "3" refer to the days before your credit card statement's closing date. Specifically, the rule suggests you make one payment 15 days before your statement closes and another payment three days before it closes.
The short answer: to retire on $80,000 a year in Australia, you'll need a super balance of roughly between $700,000 and $1.4 million. It's a broad range, and that's because everyone's circumstances are different.
Yes, $600,000 can be enough to retire at 60 in Australia for many, especially if you're a single person aiming for a comfortable lifestyle, but it depends heavily on your spending, assets, and eligibility for the Age Pension. While some sources suggest $600k covers a single's comfortable retirement (around $52k-$53k/year), it's near the lower end, and couples might need closer to $700k for a similar standard, making financial planning crucial for a stress-free retirement.
The top ten financial mistakes most people make after retirement are:
Whilst boomers and millennials may use the 😂 emoji, this has long since been deemed 'uncool' (or 'cheugy') by Gen Z. Instead, this has been replaced by the skull (💀) or the crying emoji (😭), dramatising the idea of 'dying with laughter'.
Millennials will be inheriting the most ($46 trillion) of any generation over the course of the next 25 years. However, Gen X stands to inherit the greatest portion of assets in the next 10 years, totaling $14 trillion to Millennials' $8 trillion, the report further advises.
Recent research shows that members of the Baby Boomer generation have worse health than previous generations did at the same ages—diabetes, heart disease and other chronic illnesses are more common.