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Net worth: the one number that tells your complete financial story

Your net worth is the most comprehensive single measure of your financial health. It captures everything: what you own (assets) minus what you owe (liabilities). A high income with no savings and high debt produces a low net worth. A modest income with disciplined saving over 30 years produces a high one. Net worth is the score of the long game.

Most people know roughly what their salary is, have some idea of their bank account balance, and know they have debt — but few sit down to calculate their actual net worth. When you do, the results are clarifying. You see exactly where you stand, which assets are working for you, which liabilities are costing you the most, and how much progress you have made over time.

What to include in each category

Net worth benchmarks by age

Fidelity Investments offers commonly cited benchmarks: save 1× your salary by 30, 3× by 40, 6× by 50, 8× by 60, and 10× by 67. These are retirement-specific and represent what you need in savings/investments, not total net worth including home equity.

Federal Reserve data shows median net worth by age: Under 35: ~$39,000. Ages 35–44: ~$135,000. Ages 45–54: ~$247,000. Ages 55–64: ~$365,000. Ages 65–74: ~$410,000. Remember that median is the middle value — half of people are above and half below. These numbers can be sobering or reassuring depending on where you are — but the direction of travel (is your net worth increasing?) matters more than the absolute number at any given age.

Example: How to read your net worth trend

Calculate your net worth quarterly or annually using the same categories each time. What matters is not whether you have a 'good' number today, but whether the number is growing. A 28-year-old with -$15,000 net worth (student loans exceeding savings) who sees their net worth increase by $10,000 per year is on a strong trajectory. The trend is the data.

Frequently asked questions

Yes — your home is an asset at current market value. Subtract the remaining mortgage balance (a liability). The difference is your home equity. However, be aware that your home is illiquid: you cannot spend your home equity without selling or borrowing against it. Many financial planners track 'investable net worth' (excluding home equity) separately from total net worth.
According to Fidelity's benchmark, 1× your annual salary by 30. By 35, the median US net worth is approximately $135,000 according to Federal Reserve data. However, these are benchmarks — not requirements. What matters most is the trajectory: are you making consistent progress?
Quarterly is a good cadence — frequent enough to stay engaged with your finances, infrequent enough that short-term market swings do not cause unnecessary anxiety. Annual calculation at minimum gives you a meaningful year-over-year trend.
Not necessarily, especially at younger ages. Student loan debt is a common reason 20-somethings have negative net worth. A -$30,000 net worth at 25 from student loans with a growing career ahead is very different from a -$30,000 net worth at 50 from credit card debt. The context and trajectory matter enormously.
No. Net worth is a snapshot of what you own and owe right now. Future income is not an asset in the accounting sense, though your 'human capital' — your ability to earn — is a real economic asset that is relevant to financial planning even if not captured in the net worth calculation.

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