DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

The average worker would need to save for 52 years to claw their way of of the middle class and be classified as wealthy, new research reveals

December 23, 2025
in News
The average worker would need to save for 52 years to claw their way of of the middle class and be classified as wealthy, new research reveals

The exact number of years of saving it’d take for the average worker to claw out of the middle class bracket has been revealed—and it’s nearly half a century.

Sobering new research from the think tank Resolution Foundation shows that for aspirational Brits looking to move up the wealth ladder, not even a lifetime of savings would be enough. 

In fact, the average worker would need to save their earnings for 52 years, to raise £1.3 million ($1.7 million), the amount needed to move from the middle and become as wealthy as the richest 10%.

And it gets worse: That’s with zero outgoings.

“Wealth gaps in Britain are now so large that a typical full-time employee saving all their earnings across their entire working life would still not be able to reach the top of the wealth ladder,” Molly Broome, senior economist at the Resolution Foundation and the lead author of the report, wrote.

And for those who happen to be born in the working class, the odds are increasingly stacked against them.

“Wealth mobility in Britain is low—people that start life wealthy tend to stay wealthy, and vice versa,” Broome added.

As the saying goes, money makes money. The report revealed that the key driver of widening inequality is the so-called “passive” gains. Essentially, those who bought property and invested their money in pensions have seen their wealth balloon since 2010.

Workers in the U.S. would need to save for 70 years to unlock the American dream

As inflation squeezes workers in a cost-of-living vise, paired with a job crisisthat’s not been this bad since the financial crisis, and AI threatening to make it even worse, the salary it takes to be considered rich keeps climbing further out of reach. And the issue is transatlantic.

Even in the U.S., workers say they’d need at least $2.3 million to feel rich (up $100k from two years ago). Meanwhile, separate research highlights they’d need a staggering $4.4 million to achieve the American Dream—the house in the suburbs, two children, an annual vacation, and a new car in the drive.

In fact, Investopedia did the math and calculated that achieving those milestones would cost over $1 million more than most Americans will make in their lifetime.

With median weekly earnings of full-time workers averaging at $1,214, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, it would take 36 years of full-time work to feel rich with $2.3 million in the bank. That’s before a single bill is paid, and still $2.1 million short of affording the American Dream.

It would take the average American worker nearly 70 years without a single outgoing to reach that $4.4 million benchmark—far longer than most people will work in a lifetime, and that’s without even considering automation’s impact on the future of work, inflation, or any unexpected financial shocks.

The post The average worker would need to save for 52 years to claw their way of of the middle class and be classified as wealthy, new research reveals appeared first on Fortune.

Maybe Trump the isolationist had imperial ambitions all along
News

Trump was an imperialist all along

by Washington Post
January 12, 2026

Until recently, President Donald Trump had a reputation as a quasi-isolationist. In his first inaugural address, he complained, “We’ve … ...

Read more
News

Guy Moon, Emmy-nominated composer of beloved Nickelodeon animated shows, dies at 63

January 12, 2026
News

A Failed State Shaped the 20th Century. Can Today’s Leaders Avoid Its Fate?

January 12, 2026
News

Fundraiser for ICE Killer Is Busted Spewing Antisemitism

January 12, 2026
News

George and Amal Clooney are still one of the best-dressed couples in Hollywood

January 12, 2026
Russia’s Fearsome Arsenal Fizzled in Venezuela. Here’s Why.

Russia’s Fearsome Arsenal Fizzled in Venezuela. Here’s Why.

January 12, 2026
Monkeys are on the loose in St. Louis, and AI-generated jokes are just slowing down animal control’s primate chase

Monkeys are on the loose in St. Louis, and AI-generated jokes are just slowing down animal control’s primate chase

January 12, 2026
A West Virginia Law Bars One Trans Athlete. Her Case Could Affect the Country.

A West Virginia Law Bars One Trans Athlete. Her Case Could Affect the Country.

January 12, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025