Family finances still have not recovered from the collapse of the housing bubble: Median net worth of families age 32–61, 1989–2016 (2016 dollars)
32–37 | 38–43 | 44–49 | 50–55 | 56–61 | All 32–61 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1989 | $49,147 | $107,380 | $158,169 | $197,595 | $164,289 | $115,240 |
1992 | $41,055 | $87,660 | $110,066 | $173,258 | $209,969 | $97,941 |
1995 | $48,546 | $82,732 | $125,202 | $172,574 | $175,392 | $102,495 |
1998 | $55,920 | $105,008 | $140,405 | $183,267 | $185,613 | $124,071 |
2001 | $47,623 | $116,477 | $158,924 | $220,299 | $270,679 | $140,092 |
2004 | $51,634 | $116,622 | $160,117 | $205,545 | $324,177 | $139,247 |
2007 | $57,762 | $121,592 | $169,070 | $246,541 | $332,640 | $160,964 |
2010 | $21,664 | $53,962 | $96,716 | $156,293 | $170,994 | $82,789 |
2013 | $28,355 | $58,402 | $71,868 | $124,867 | $169,101 | $81,107 |
2016 | $32,000 | $74,000 | $107,150 | $136,480 | $194,120 | $94,590 |
Note: Scale changed to accommodate larger values.
Source: EPI analysis of Survey of Consumer Finance data, 2016.