Defaults on credit card debt have surged to their highest levels since the 2008 financial crisis, signaling worsening financial conditions for lower-income consumers amid persistent inflation and elevated interest rates.
By the numbers:
- Credit card lenders wrote off $46 billion in seriously delinquent loan balances in the first nine months of 2024, a 50% increase compared to the same period in 2023, according to BankRegData.
- Capital One reported its annualized credit card write-off rate rose to 6.1% in November, up from 5.2% a year ago.
- Total U.S. credit card debt surpassed $1 trillion in mid-2023, with Americans paying $170 billion in interest in the past year.
- After writing off $60 billion in credit card debt in the past year, consumers are at least one month behind on another $37 billion of credit card debt.
The big picture: Consumers are feeling the pinch as higher balances and borrowing costs erode their financial stability:
- Low-income households: With a savings rate of nearly zero, these consumers are struggling the most, facing significant financial distress.
- Middle-income households: Many are increasingly reliant on credit as a buffer against inflationary pressures.
Between the lines: The pandemic-era surge in savings and consumer spending gave credit card issuers confidence to extend credit to riskier borrowers. However, as inflation and interest rates climbed, many of these borrowers are now unable to keep up with payments.
What’s next:
- The Federal Reserve’s recent signal of limited rate cuts in 2025 offers little relief.
- Industry experts, including WalletHub’s Odysseas Papadimitriou, warn that delinquencies are a leading indicator of more significant financial challenges ahead.
What they’re saying: Mark Zandi, the head of Moody’s Analytics: “High-income households are fine, but the bottom third of US consumers are tapped out. Their savings rate right now is zero.”