Most Americans started 2026 no better off financially, with inflation still driving regret

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For many households, the end of 2025 did not feel like a return to financial normal. Inflation had cooled from its earlier peak, but the prices Americans paid for groceries, meals out, housing, and other basics were still well above where they had been just a few years earlier. That left a wide gap between what the economy looked like on paper and how it felt at the kitchen table. By the time 2026 began, the bigger problem was not just that prices were still rising. It was that many households no longer felt they had enough breathing room to absorb those costs. Savings remained thin, monthly budgets stayed tight, and for a large share of consumers, simply holding steady counted as progress.
How 2025 looked for household finances Key survey and economic indicators tied to consumer strain  0% 15% 30% 45% 60%     60% 17% 26% 2.7% 3.6% Same or worse off Worse off Cited inflation as top challenge 2025 CPI increase Personal saving rate
A majority of Americans started 2026 feeling stuck or worse off financially, while inflation remained the most commonly cited source of money strain in 2025.

Most Americans Did Not Feel Ahead By the Start of 2026

One of the clearest snapshots of that strain came from a LendingTree survey released in January 2026. It found that 60% of Americans said their financial situation at the start of 2026 was the same or worse than it had been at the beginning of 2025. Within that group, 17% said they were worse off. That distinction matters. It suggests that while not everyone felt poorer in a literal year-over-year sense, a majority still finished 2025 without the kind of improvement many had hoped for. In other words, the year did not deliver broad financial relief. For millions of people, it delivered stagnation, and for a meaningful minority, decline. The same survey also pointed to what consumers believed was getting in the way. Asked what made managing finances most difficult in 2025, 26% chose rising prices and inflation, far more than any other response. Unexpected expenses came next at 15%, followed by changes in income or job situation at 11%.

Inflation Slowed, but Prices Were Still Climbing

That frustration lines up with the government’s own inflation data. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics review of 2025 CPI data, consumer prices rose 2.7% from December 2024 to December 2025. Food prices increased 3.1% over that same period, including a 2.4% rise for food at home and a 4.1% increase for food away from home. That helps explain why inflation remained such a powerful source of financial stress even after the worst of the post-pandemic surge had passed. A lower inflation rate does not mean prices are falling. It means prices are still going up, just less quickly than before. For households that had already spent years adjusting to higher bills, even a calmer inflation reading still meant paying more than they were used to. The mismatch between official progress and everyday experience was especially visible in food and services. Those are the categories people encounter constantly. A family can ignore stock market swings or policy debates for a while. It cannot ignore a higher supermarket total, a pricier restaurant check, or a rent payment that keeps eating up a bigger share of the month’s paycheck.

Income Was Rising, but Not Enough to Feel Like Relief

Income growth helped, but only to a point. In its December 2025 personal income and outlays report, the Bureau of Economic Analysis said disposable personal income increased 0.3% for the month, while personal consumption expenditures rose 0.4%. Real consumer spending increased just 0.1%. That is the kind of data that makes many consumers feel as if they are running in place. Money is still coming in, but more of it is immediately absorbed by essentials and routine spending. There is little left over to restore savings, pay down balances, or prepare for the next surprise expense. BEA also reported that the personal saving rate was 3.6% in December 2025. That is not the picture of a consumer flush with extra cash. It is the picture of a household sector that remains exposed. When savings rates stay modest and living costs remain elevated, even relatively small setbacks can force families onto credit cards or into tradeoffs they do not want to make.

Financial Regret Was About More Than Prices Alone

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techdailyca/Unsplash
Inflation did not just create sticker shock. It changed behavior. It pushed households to delay purchases, cut discretionary spending, juggle bills, or lean on debt to cover routine needs. That is why financial stress at the end of 2025 was not only about annoyance with prices. It was about the sense that long-term plans kept getting pushed aside by short-term survival. That feeling also showed up in survey data beyond LendingTree’s year-end snapshot. A Bankrate financial outlook survey published in December 2025 found that 32% of Americans expected their finances to worsen in 2026, up from 23% a year earlier when they were asked about 2025. Among those who expected things to get worse, 78% said continued high inflation was the reason. Separate Bankrate financial regret data from 2025 also underscored how widespread money frustration had become. About three-quarters of Americans said they had a financial regret, with retirement savings and credit card debt topping the list. That does not mean inflation itself was the single biggest regret, but it does show the environment in which many regrets were formed: one where higher everyday costs made it harder to save, harder to get ahead, and easier to fall behind.

Why the Mood Stayed So Sour

Economically, 2025 was not a year of runaway inflation. But psychologically, it was still a year of high-price fatigue. The difference is crucial. Consumers were not reacting only to the latest monthly number. They were reacting to the cumulative effect of several years in which the baseline cost of living had been reset higher. That is why so many Americans reached the start of 2026 without feeling financially restored. Some were worse off. Many more were simply no better off. And in both cases, inflation remained central, not because it was spiraling out of control, but because it kept pressuring budgets that had never fully recovered. For readers trying to understand the household economy rather than just the macroeconomic one, that is the real takeaway from 2025. The year ended with inflation lower than its peak, but still powerful enough to shape consumer mood, squeeze savings, and leave a majority of Americans feeling stuck instead of ahead.