Anyone who’s ever stared at a card reader and silently begged for approval knows that sinking feeling in your stomach. That reaction is often attributed to tight budgets, but new research shows that even households making $200,000 a year are avoiding their banking apps because the numbers on the screen are stressful, not relaxing.
According to new research from The Harris Poll, 40% of people with six-figure incomes say they have avoided checking their account balance to reduce stress, and that share rises to 42% among those who earn $200,000 or more. Nearly half of people in this group also say they struggle with financial anxiety, and most feel guilty complaining about money because they know they earn more than most.
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The “Income Paradox Survey” was conducted online in the US between July 31 and August 2. It captured 2,109 adults nationwide, including 728 people with personal incomes of at least $100,000 and 280 earning $200,000 or more, about the top 10% of individual income earners. So people who say they are stressed are not the outliers at the bottom of the six-figure bracket.
The headline figures explain why opening a banking app has become a scare. Six figures now seem more like survival than success. Harris finds that 64% of six-figure earners agree that six figures are “a means of survival, not a sign of wealth,” and 52% say that even at this level, the American dream is not possible for them. About 1 in 3 describe themselves as being in financial difficulty, meaning they feel pressured, struggling or drowning with their finances.
Money is not spent on designer bags or mansions. It will go into the same categories that challenge everyone else, just with higher prices. When Harris asked what is draining their income the most right now, people with six-figure incomes pointed to groceries and household necessities first at 36%, followed by rent or mortgage payments at 32%, and health insurance or medical costs at 31%. Unexpected emergencies and transportation costs round out the top five, both at around 30%.
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Those basics leave little room for convenience expenses. More than half of people with six-figure incomes say that things like regular vacations, driving a new car, or going out to dinner regularly fall into a financial “pressure zone” where they struggle to cover the cost or actively avoid it to stay stable. It’s a quiet restoration of what used to be considered middle-class life.
To close the gap, many high earners are turning to solutions that used to be associated with people earning much less. Three-quarters of people with six-figure incomes have put their everyday bills on a credit card in the past three months because they ran out of cash, not to chase rewards. That increases to 80% among those earning $200,000 or more. Nearly half of the $200,000 group say they rely on credit cards to make ends meet, and 45% say buy now, pay later has become a regular part of how they spend their money.
Coping strategies go beyond plastic. Among people with six-figure incomes, 61% are already working at a side business or plan to, and a sizable proportion report selling personal items, cutting back on healthcare, or even skipping meals to keep up with expenses. In the same survey, 62% say they find it almost impossible to keep up with expenses on one income.
Rising prices haven’t helped. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that consumer prices have risen about 23% since 2019, meaning a paycheck that once covered a comfortable lifestyle now has to stretch much further to stay put. For households whose costs are concentrated in housing, health care, child care and debt, those years of inflation still resonate.
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That leads to the real question: How much would it take for these high-income earners to finally feel confident instead of stressed every time they check a scale?
Harris asked that directly. Half of people with six-figure incomes say a household needs at least $200,000 a year to feel comfortably middle class where they live. Among those who already earn $200,000 or more, 75% say the same. Even more surprising is that 53% of six-figure earners say they would not feel financially secure unless they earned twice what they earn now, a view shared by 53% of the $200,000 group and 55% of all Americans.
In other words, many people who already earn $200,000 think they would only breathe easy around $400,000. Six-figure salaries were once the goal. In this survey, they look more like mile markers on a moving track, where even people near the front are still looking over their shoulders, hoping the next notification isn’t another bill.
For anyone in that group, talking to a financial advisor can alleviate some of the drama of those numbers. A good advisor can help high-income earners determine where their money is really going, make a plan for borrowing, saving, and investing, and see what’s really “safe” for their home. It won’t fix rising prices or rewrite a paycheck, but it can turn a vague fear into a clearer map, which is often the first step toward feeling less anxious every time you fire up the banking app.
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This article About 42% of people who earn $200,000 avoid checking their bank accounts due to stress, and half say they would need to double their income to feel secure originally appeared on Benzinga.com
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