What Is Middle Class in America? Beyond the Income Range
Nearly everyone identifies as middle class. Households earning $40,000 say it. Households earning $250,000 say it. The label has become something people reach for regardless of where the income data actually puts them.
Pew Research Center defines the middle class as households earning between two-thirds and double the local median income. With the U.S. median at $83,730 in 2024, that puts the national range at roughly $55,000 to $167,000. But the thresholds shift by city and state, and even for households squarely within the range, income alone says little about how secure they are. Debt, savings, and financial habits do most of that work.

The Middle Class Is Defined by Income, and the Range Might Surprise You
The $55,000-to-$167,000 spread is wider than the label makes it sound. A household earning $67,000 and one earning $160,000 are both middle class under Pew’s definition, even though their day-to-day finances look nothing alike.
In 2022, the typical middle-class family earned about $106,000, compared to roughly $257,000 for upper-income households and $35,000 for lower-income households, according to Pew. Those benchmarks will update once Pew applies the 2024 Census data to its formula.
Middle-Class Income Looks Very Different Depending on Where You Live
Middle-class income thresholds are local, not national. Because living costs and local economies vary wildly, a single national average doesn’t show the full picture. The lower bound in San Jose, California runs nearly $100,000. In Cleveland, Ohio, it’s under $29,000.
To see how much geography skews the numbers, an analysis of U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) data highlights the absolute floors and ceilings across the country. By applying Pew’s two-thirds to double methodology to local median incomes, we can map the widest gaps at both the state and major city levels:
| Location | Lower Bound | Upper Bound |
| Mississippi | $39,418 | $118,254 |
| Massachusetts | $69,885 | $209,656 |
| San Jose, CA | $98,817 | $296,452 |
| Cleveland, OH | $28,922 | $86,766 |
Source: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) data, calculated using Pew Research Center middle-class thresholds.
These extremes reveal the limitations of using a blanket national label. Consider a household earning $90,000 a year:
- In San Jose, they fall into the lower-income tier, short of the middle-class entry point.
- In Massachusetts and Mississippi, they are squarely middle class.
- In Cleveland, they clear the exit point and cross into the upper-income tier.
Location shapes your financial reality far more than national data suggests, redefining what a dollar is worth from one county to the next.
The American Middle Class Has Been Shrinking for 50 Years
In 2023, 51% of Americans lived in middle-class households, down from 61% in 1971. The lower-income tier now makes up 30% of the population. The upper-income tier accounts for 19%, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts.
The middle class hasn’t collapsed. It’s carrying fewer people than it once did. Some of that movement has gone upward, toward the upper-income tier, while some has gone in the other direction. The net result is a middle class that’s thinner than at any point in the last five decades.
That upward movement matters too: the share of Americans in upper-income households has grown from 14% in 1971 to 19% today. Class isn’t fixed.
Your Income Bracket Doesn’t Tell the Whole Story
A household earning $100,000 a year with significant debt and no savings buffer can be less financially secure than one earning $70,000 with a funded emergency account and a plan in place. Where you fall in the income range is a starting point. The debt you carry, the savings you’ve built, and the buffer you maintain when something breaks are what determine how secure your position actually is.
From a financial health standpoint, middle-class status tends to involve balancing a monthly budget, carrying manageable debt, and saving for the future. Income doesn’t generate those habits on its own. Plenty of households in the middle income range live paycheck to paycheck. Others well below the median have built real financial resilience.
Knowing where you stand requires looking at the full picture. The Boldin Planner’s Financial Wellness Assessment looks beyond income to your debt, savings, and spending habits. Those are the factors that determine financial security.
Middle-Class Financial Stability Is More Fragile Than the Income Range Suggests
Middle-class stability means a steady paycheck, employer-sponsored health insurance, and a financial cushion large enough that a car repair or medical bill doesn’t spiral into debt. Those elements are what most households in this income range work to protect, and what economic pressure has put most at risk.
Building that cushion creates room to save, invest, and plan for the long term. Losing it is what makes financial recovery so difficult.
The distinction between middle-class and working-class financial life often comes down to those buffers, not the income number itself.
Education Shapes Class Position in Ways Income Alone Doesn’t Show
Among Americans 25 and older with a bachelor’s degree, 52% lived in middle-class households in 2022. Another 35% lived in upper-income households, according to Pew Research. Education correlates with class. It doesn’t determine it.
Student loan debt has pulled some college-educated households toward lower-income territory. A degree raises earning potential and also front-loads a financial burden that can take a decade or more to clear.
The industries with the largest share of middle-income workers, per Pew:
- Military: 65%
- Public administration: 61%
- Education: 61%
- Manufacturing: 59%
- Transportation, warehousing, and utilities: 59%
- Construction: 59%
Race and ethnicity also shape where people land. The share of Americans in the middle class ranges from 46% to 55% across racial groups, according to Pew Research. Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous households are concentrated in the lower-income tier at higher rates. Asian American households track toward the upper end of the distribution. The gaps reflect decades of unequal access to credit, housing, and higher-paying fields.
Class identity can also diverge from income. I grew up in a household that, by income, would have qualified as working poor. I thought of us as middle class. Among peers who had more, I felt a sense of belonging. Now I live in a community of upper-income households where nearly everyone identifies as middle class. The benchmarks tell one story. Identity tells another.
Where you fall on the income scale and where you feel you belong are often two different places. Both shape how you approach money and planning.
Homeownership Is Still Central to Middle-Class Life, and Harder to Reach
The U.S. Census Bureau’s Housing Vacancy Survey puts the national homeownership rate at between 65.3% and 65.7%. Owning a home remains a core feature of middle-class life. The path to it has gotten much harder.
A 2024 Bipartisan Policy Center analysis found that home prices have surged roughly 50% since 2020. The annual salary required to purchase a median-priced home has risen 78% over the same period. That assumes a traditional 20% down payment. For many middle-class households, getting to a first home now takes longer and costs more than it did for their parents.
The racial breakdown tells its own story:
- White households: 75.1%
- Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander households: 63.1%
- Hispanic households: 48.7%
- Black households: 44.2%
Source: U.S. Census Bureau Housing Vacancy Survey
Those differences reflect decades of embedded barriers in housing access and financing. For households that got in before prices surged, equity has become a significant asset. Average mortgaged homeowners held $295,000 in equity as of Q4 2025, according to Cotality (formerly CoreLogic).
For households still working toward a first home, having a plan that accounts for the timeline and the down payment makes the path more tangible.
Middle-Class Savings Are Smaller Than Most People Think
The median U.S. transaction account balance, covering checking, savings, and money market accounts, is $8,000, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances. The average is $62,410. The distance between those two numbers reflects how a small number of very high-balance households pulls the mean up. For most American families, $8,000 is closer to reality.
Among middle-class households, the median emergency savings balance is $10,000, according to Transamerica’s 2025 research. That figure grows with age, from $2,000 for people in their 20s to $20,000 for those in their 60s. More than one in 10 middle-class households has no emergency savings at all.
The broader picture of savings is rougher. Bankrate’s 2026 Annual Emergency Savings Report found that only 46% of U.S. adults have enough saved to cover three months of expenses. A Federal Reserve SHED survey puts that figure at 55% of all adults. That benchmark is precisely the same even for middle-income households earning $50,000 to $99,000.
Those figures describe the current reality for millions of middle-class households. A plan changes what comes next.
Financial Planning Is the Lever Anyone Can Pull
Whatever your income, a structured financial plan is the most reliable way to improve your position. Start by tracking every asset and liability. From there, build a savings buffer and run scenarios that show how today’s decisions compound over time.
The Boldin Planner connects all of those threads: cash accounts, savings, home equity, and spending projections. Set goals and stress-test your assumptions. See what adjustments change your long-term financial outlook.
Class is a function of income and what you do with it.
Frequently Asked Questions About the Middle Class
The middle class spans roughly $55,000 to $167,000 in annual household income at the national level, based on Pew Research Center’s formula of two-thirds to double the median. The U.S. Census Bureau’s 2024 national median household income is $83,730, which generates that range through the Pew method. The thresholds vary by location rather than following a single national standard, so the middle-class range in Mississippi sits much lower than the range in Massachusetts or California.
Middle-class income boundaries are local because Pew’s formula works from each area’s own median rather than a single national figure. In Cleveland, Ohio, the lower bound for middle-class status sits at about $28,922. In San Jose, California, it’s $98,817. A household earning $60,000 can be solidly middle class in one state and fall below the entry threshold in another. These baseline boundaries are tracked by applying Pew’s thresholds directly to U.S. Census Bureau local median income data.
About 51% of Americans lived in middle-class households in 2023, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts. That figure was 61% in 1971. The lower-income tier now accounts for 30% of the population; the upper-income tier accounts for 19%. The middle class has contracted over five decades as income growth has concentrated toward the upper end of the distribution.
Among middle-class households, the median emergency savings balance is $10,000, according to Transamerica’s 2025 research. That figure ranges from $2,000 for households in their 20s to $20,000 for those in their 60s. The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances puts the median transaction account balance, covering checking and savings accounts, at $8,000 for all U.S. households. The average is $62,410, but a small number of very high-balance households skew that figure upward. More than one in ten middle-class households has no emergency savings at all.
The industries with the largest share of middle-income workers include the military (65%), public administration (61%), and education (61%), according to Pew Research. Manufacturing, transportation, and construction each come in at 59%. Middle-class jobs tend to offer stable income, employer benefits, and reasonable job security, though those features appear across many fields and income levels, not just the industries Pew tracks.
Working-class households generally fall in the lower third of the Pew income range, below two-thirds of the median household income for their area. The distinction is also occupational. Working-class jobs tend to involve manual or service labor and often carry less job security and fewer employer benefits than middle-class positions. Income and identity don’t always align. Many people who earn middle-class wages identify as working class, and the reverse is common too.
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