78% of Americans have no money left at the end of the month
78% of Americans have no bank account cash by the end of the month.

Why are they broke at the end of the month in the US? How do they afford games?
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目前顯示第 1-15 則留言,共 92
Anti-Sauron 10 月 2 日 上午 6:49 
It would make better sense if your statistics counted gamers rather than everyone who also are not gamers.
I'm still able to buy games here in the US of A, lol.
joco 10 月 2 日 上午 6:55 
Did they shred it on the last day of the month?
lailaamell 10 月 2 日 上午 6:56 
引用自 Arvaos ⚚
78% of Americans have no bank account cash by the end of the month.

Why are they broke at the end of the month in the US? How do they afford games?
when the solution is to work more they have 24 hours they can work and earn money a day should fill as much of it with work as possible sleep is for those with money
最後修改者:lailaamell; 10 月 2 日 上午 6:57
Xero_Daxter 10 月 2 日 上午 6:58 
I’m the exception rather than the rule.
HermitTheToad 10 月 2 日 上午 6:58 
引用自 Arvaos ⚚
78% of Americans have no bank account cash by the end of the month.

Why are they broke at the end of the month in the US? How do they afford games?
If this is a real statistic, I cant help but feel most of it is young children/adults or the eldery...
Also not to be that guy but souce?
lailaamell 10 月 2 日 上午 6:59 
引用自 joco
Did they shred it on the last day of the month?
like most use credit in us that means debt kinda wierd to have a society pushing for ppl to spend money they dont have or no bank will want their money at all
最後修改者:lailaamell; 10 月 2 日 上午 7:00
steven1mac 10 月 2 日 上午 7:08 
They have the latest phone, PC, fashion item, half of it is money management problems. People who make 300k a year will still spend most of the money, they have been taught consumerism since the crib.
lailaamell 10 月 2 日 上午 7:09 
引用自 steven1mac
They have the latest phone, PC, fashion item, half of it is money management problems. People who make 300k a year will still spend most of the money, they have been taught consumerism since the crib.
like the irony is those things got cheaper everything else skyrocketed
Xero_Daxter 10 月 2 日 上午 7:10 
Am I the only one who still uses an iPhone 13 Pro Max? I haven’t upgraded since.
pauldiazberrio 10 月 2 日 上午 7:12 
引用自 joco
Did they shred it on the last day of the month?

I was wondering the same thing.
Arvaos ⚚ 10 月 2 日 上午 7:37 
引用自 Emperor Chungus III
I'm still able to buy games here in the US of A, lol.

Well, it's the start of the month now.
Brma 10 月 2 日 上午 7:39 
People live outside their means. The state I'm in I see it takes like something $100,000 a year to live comfortably. In reality it's not even close to that.
Arvaos ⚚ 10 月 2 日 上午 7:40 
引用自 HermitTheToad
引用自 Arvaos ⚚
78% of Americans have no bank account cash by the end of the month.

Why are they broke at the end of the month in the US? How do they afford games?
If this is a real statistic, I cant help but feel most of it is young children/adults or the eldery...
Also not to be that guy but souce?

Interestingly, I don't have any exact source. I saw it on Reddit.

The answer depends heavily on how “living paycheck to paycheck” is defined.

In 2025, PNC Bank’s “Financial Wellness in the Workplace” report found 67% of workers say they are living paycheck to paycheck.

MarketWatch reports that 57% of Americans say they’re living paycheck to paycheck in 2025.

A review of multiple studies shows LendingClub’s surveys (from mid-2021 to late 2023) found 52% to 64% of consumers lived paycheck to paycheck, depending on the month.

In contrast, BankRate’s survey put a lower figure: 34% of workers said they live paycheck to paycheck.

Definition variance: Some surveys define it as having “no money left over after expenses,” others as “needing the next paycheck to make ends meet,” or “spending at least 95% of income on essentials.”

Self-reporting vs. transaction data: Some figures rely on people’s perceptions (self-reports), others use anonymized banking data to estimate how close people are to zero cash after expenses.

Sample differences: Some surveys look at workers only, some at all adults, some at particular income groups or regions.

A Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) report indicates that 24% of consumers report having zero emergency savings, and 39% have less than one month of income saved.

A Bankrate survey finds that only 46% of U.S. adults have enough savings to cover three months of expenses, meaning the majority are under-prepared for emergencies.
joco 10 月 2 日 上午 7:44 
引用自 lailaamell
引用自 joco
Did they shred it on the last day of the month?
like most use credit in us that means debt kinda wierd to have a society pushing for ppl to spend money they dont have or no bank will want their money at all
I would not know, I made the choice of having no credit cards. I use a Debit card or cash only. I have a mortgage and living expenses only.
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