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SurveyMonkey

We’re Livestreaming The World’s Most Uncurious Meeting | SurveyMonkey The 6-Step Framework We Used to Name SurveyMonkey LaunchPad SurveyMonkey LaunchPad Is Now Live | Validate Ideas Before You Launch CNBC and SurveyMonkey American Dream Pulse Survey What’s New at SurveyMonkey: The CuriosityCon Spring 2026 Product Reveal Why the AI Era Demands Better Questions | SurveyMonkey How B2B Buyers Choose: New Data on the Modern Journey CNBC and SurveyMonkey Quarterly AI and Jobs Survey - Q2 2026 State of Curiosity 2026: Why Work Smothers Innovation AI in Customer Service: 4 Lessons on What Customers Want Claude x SurveyMonkey: Create & Analyze Surveys Directly on Claude How to determine your company’s core values in 4 steps SurveyMonkey Programs: Turn One Off Surveys Into Continuous Listening SurveyMonkey Research: Q1 2026 AI Sentiment Study Get clearer insights with our suite of powerful new analysis features | SurveyMonkey 5 Guidelines For Effective Brand Measurement A simpler way to create surveys with SurveyMonkey Send Sms Survey Invites Directly From Salesforce How SurveyMonkey is Building AI You Can Trust What If You Just Knew SurveyMonkey Brand Campaign CNBC|SurveyMonkey 2026 Spring Break Pulse 2026 Treatonomics Report: Insight into US Consumer Spending CNBC|SurveyMonkey poll: Women at Work 2025
CNBC and SurveyMonkey Quarterly Money Survey - Q2 2026
Sam Gutierrez 8 min read • Published: April 9, 2026 · 2026-04-09 · via SurveyMonkey

Key findings

Half of Americans (50%) are more stressed financially than a year ago, with 70% of Americans just managing, struggling, or falling behind

Only five percent of Americans describe their current personal financial situation as “thriving”, with one in four (25%) feeling “comfortable”. The largest group of Americans, at 41%, are “managing” to get by, followed by 21% who are “struggling” financially, and 9% who feel like they are “falling behind”.  Millennials are more likely than all other age groups to feel like they are falling behind (15% vs. 8% of Gen Z, 9% of Gen X). More than half of Americans (59%) consider themselves as living “paycheck-to-paycheck”, with Millennials also more likely to self-identify as such (74% vs. 65% of Gen Z, 63% of Gen X). 

Low savings and debt are the leading contributors of financial stress for Americans

A quarter of Americans cite auto insurance (24%) and medical bills (24%) as financial stressors, while a small but significant percentage cite their mortgage (17%), student loans (16%), home insurance (15%), and auto loans (14%).

Americans are pessimistic about the U.S. economy as they face rising prices for groceries and transportation

More than half (54%) of Americans think the U.S. economy will decline over the next year; only three in ten (28%) expect things to improve, while 18% believe things will remain about the same. Similarly, 56% of Americans say everyday life has become less affordable for their household compared to one year ago, citing the rising prices of groceries (76%), gas and transportation (71%), utilities (49%), health care expenses (37%), insurance (35%), and rent or mortgage (32%). They are also reducing spending or stopping purchasing across many categories due to rising costs, including:

In addition to cutting expenses, Americans are navigating rising prices by tapping into their savings, increasing their income, or taking on debt

Four in ten (39%) Americans have used a credit card to pay for groceries or household essentials due to affordability issues

Americans are also relying on debt or loans to pay for a potential $1,000 emergency expense:

One in four (23%) adults say homeownership is completely out of reach for them

Only one in ten (11%) Americans expect to be able to purchase a home in the next five years; one in five are cautiously optimistic (19% maybe), while one in four (23%) say it feels impossible. Despite the pessimism over homeownership, only 4% of Americans say they are not interested in owning a home.

For those who are not currently homeowners or in a position to currently purchase a home, optimism towards the prospect of homeownership varies:

Affordability is a leading issue for upcoming elections as rising food and energy prices are Americans’ biggest economic concern

One in four (23%) Americans say that affordability is the most important issue for them in upcoming elections, while more than half (54%) say it is one of the top issues. Only 24% say that it is a minor issue (12%) or not an issue (11%). Rising food and energy prices are the leading economic concern for Americans (74%), ahead of long-term economic stability (58%), health care costs (53%), housing affordability (50%), job security and wages (46%), interest rates (34%), and stock market volatility (27%).

The federal government is seen as most responsible for the current affordability crisis for Americans

Four in ten (38%) Americans say that the federal government has the most responsibility for current affordability challenges, more than double the percentage who say there is no single group responsible (15%) or attribute the challenges to global events (13%). More than half of Americans who identify as Democrats blame the federal government (55%), while only 23% of Republicans point a finger at the current administration.

Paying down credit card debt, increasing savings, and covering living expenses are the top expected uses of tax refunds

One in four Americans who expect a tax refund this year plan to use their refund to pay down credit card debt (23%) or put it in savings (23%), and 20% expect to use their refund to cover living expenses. Less than 10% plan to use their refund to splurge on purchases (3%), make a major purchase (4%), pay down non-credit card debt (7%), or invest it (3%).