No Wonder Why Millennials Don’t Give A Damn About Money!

Millennials tend to get a bad reputation for work ethic, money management, and common sense. The term quiet quitting was invented by Millennials during the pandemic as a way to not work more. But perhaps this is not fair as every older generation tends to bag on younger generations.

However, if you've gotten a sense that Millennials, folks born between 1980 – 2000, seem to be a little clueless or delusional about money, you might be right!

It's common practice for every generation to hate on the next younger generation. You should see the attitudes my fellow 65+ year old condo owners have towards the sub 35-year-old owners during our annual HOA meetings.

It's as if the younger owners don't deserve to have the same rights as the older owners, even though the younger owners paid way more for their properties.

Given that roughly half of Financial Samurai's readership is between the ages of 18 – 35, the proposition that Millennials don't care about money doesn't seem to mesh with reality. 

Most of you guys care a great deal, which is why you're here. But let's unearth the real reason why those other Millennials just don't seem to give a damn about money, shall we?

Why Millennials Don't Care About Money

After Empower released its Retirement Planner, they anonymously analyzed the data of hundreds of thousands of users who proactively decided to test out the free tool for themselves.

Each user inputs their future income expectations (raises, inheritances, windfalls) and expected expenses ($60,000 mid-life crisis car in 15 years, $250,000 in college tuition in 20 years, etc).

The Retirement Planner then runs a Monte Carlo simulation with your existing linked data and new inputted data to come out with your expected retirement cashflow. Below is an example of my Retirement Planner output.

Retirement Planner Empower

Below is the data that came out from the Retirement Planner user analysis.

Retirement Readiness By Region & Generation

  • Delaware is the #1 most prepared state for retirement with the highest average amount of savings to date at $286,277.
  • Connecticut is the #2 most prepared ($279,367 is the average amount saved).
  • New Jersey is the #3 most prepared ($272,918 is the average amount saved).
  • California falls behind with only $227,290 saved, landing in the #20 spot overall.
  • East Coasters are the most interested in paying for their education goals: New Jersey, Massachusetts and New York rank as the top 3 savers for education expenses.
  • Average savings for a 4-year education by New Jersey, Massachusetts and New York are $199,039, compared to California at #5 with an average of $174,684.
  • Baby Boomers have an average of $554,805 saved for retirement. This is 125% more than Gen X ($246,924) and over 700% more than Millennials ($68,971).
Millennials feel the wealthiest among all the generations in a 2023 Charles Schwab Wealth Survey

Millennial Specific Data On Retirement Readiness

Everything we've read so far seems to make sense. The older East Coast is the richest region in America, while older generations have more saved up for retirement. Let's now focus on the Millennial-specific data to see where things go askew.

  • Home Purchase Spending: Millennials expect to spend just $142,274 on a home purchase compared to $686,739 inputted by Gen Xers.
  • Vacation Spending: Millennials expect to spend $325,357 on vacations by retirement.
  • Number Of Working Years: Millennials expect to work 15 years on average and retire (hmm)
  • Retirement Savings: Millennials plan to save $445,687 after 15 years of work
  • Inheritance: This is the biggest mystery of all. Continue reading to find the answer.

It's clear Millennials are seriously divorced from reality! They are demonstrating a paradox of wealth where their beliefs are misaligned with their actions.

Sure, it's natural to input more aspirational figures in any retirement plan, but a whole lot of people will be disappointed with such aggressive assumptions. Let's go through the points one by one.

Remember, Empower has over one million users, most of whom are college educated, and are comfortable with using technology.

Home Purchase Spending

Rich Kids Millennials Housing Expectations

The median home price in America was ~$220,000 during the survey (~$400,000 in 2023). Based on a $142,274 budget, it looks like Millennials are all planning on living in the Midwest (investment opportunity!). The locations of Empower's Millennial users are heavily concentrated on the large coastal cities.

You cannot buy anything in the entire San Francisco Bay Area for $142,274. Good luck getting anything reasonable for $142,274 in San Diego, LA, New York, Miami, Boston, Seattle, or Washington DC and its suburbs either.

Number Of Working Years

The average American works for ~40 years until they retire. Somehow, the average Millennial thinks they'll be able to work for 15 years and hang up their boots.

Does the average Millennial plan to start a personal finance site like Financial Samurai or something? It's not a bad idea since you've seen real income profiles of financially free people who've done just that! Given the average Millennials' retirement savings in this survey is only $69,000, retiring in 15 years seems unlikely.

With the median life expectancy climbing to over 80 for both men and women, it's going to take a lot more money to support a 40+ year retirement lifestyle without work.

Even with a frugal $30,000 a year for living expenses, the Millennial would need at least $1,200,000 in savings after retiring at age 37 – 49 (age the person was surveyed + 15 years), and that's assuming zero expense inflation.

Vacation Spending

rich-millennials-3

$325,357 in vacation spending just sounds insane, even if the $325,357 was spread out over a 40 year career to equal $8,133 annually. But remember, these Millennials plan to work for only 15 years and then retire.

Hence, instead of spending an average $8,133 a year for 40 years on vacations, they will spend a whopping $21,690 a year on vacations during their short careers. Party on baby! Where's that Crystal on my yacht in Ibiza?

The average household budget is pretty large nowadays!

Retirement Savings

Millennials plan to have $445,687 saved up by retirement. That's not too shabby, especially if you have a pension or Social Security starting to kick in at 62. However, Millennials only want to work for 15 years!

To save $445,687 in 15 years requires $29,712 saved up per year. It can be done, but it will take discipline. But if you're spending $8,133 – $21,690 a year on vacations, you aren't being very disciplined at all!

Inheritance Expectations

By now, you're wondering what type of dope Millennials are smoking to be so far divorced from reality. Well here it is folks. The secret to everything! The average Millennial who tried out the Retirement Planner expects to inherit $1.06 million. This is twice as much income as from their paychecks!

No wonder why they don't care about working more than 15 years, plan to spend $21,690 a year on vacations, and only pay $142,000 for real estate. Their parents will hook them up!

Maybe they're thinking they'll spend $142,000 on just the remodel. And given Millennials won't have a mortgage to pay, they can just kick back with their retirement and vacation funds until they get an extra income boost from their 401k and Social Security.

It's all so clear to me now why Millennials emphasize “following their passion,” and “doing meaningful work,” even if they haven't put in their dues. The data from hundreds of thousands of well-educated, technology-savvy Millennials from all over the country does not lie!

Are Millennials Delusional Or Wise?

Personal Capital Retirement Planner Assumptions
Added a $1M inheritance assumption at age 50 and can now spend $20,000 a month (from $18,892) in retirement! Play around with your assumptions to see what the planner spits out.

Perhaps these Millennials aren't delusional. I used to think hard work was the main ingredient for financial success. Now I believe hard work plus rich parents equals success!

Given the parents of Millennials have invested in the biggest bull market in history, it's logical to conclude that Baby Boomer parents have a ton to give. $50+ trillion in generational wealth transfer is estimated to pass from Baby Boomers to their Millennial children over the next several decades. That buys a lot of entitlement.

The Bank Of Mom And Dad Are A Big Help

I've seen plenty of parents either bequeath their own properties to their adult kids or pay the downpayment on a new property for their adult children.

Seven of my neighbors in Golden Gate Heights, San Francisco didn't pay for their house thanks to their parents. I am the only donkey who decided to work 70+ hours a week while saving 50%+ of my after-tax income to buy my own place. I should have just asked my parents for the downpayment.

Let's be honest. If you expected over a $1 million inheritance, would you bother to try so hard? I doubt it. It's partly because I knew my parents weren't rich that I've been so determined to make ends meet on my own.

The Bank of Mom & Dad are everywhere. They are coming up with down payments for their children's homes. They've set up revocable living trusts to provide for their adult lives.

Grandparents are also pitching in to fund 529 plans for their grandchildren and for generational wealth transfer purposes. So Millennials are acting completely rational.

New Millennial Survey By Empower

I was beginning to give Millennials the benefit of the doubt when it comes to money. They seemed to be acting completely rationally given the massive generational wealth transfer.

However, in 4Q2023, Empower did another survey and found that Millennials require $525,000 in annual income to be happy! That's 4X greater than what Gen Xers, Boomers, and Gen Zero responded with.

As a result, I'm back to thinking that a lot of Millennials are either delusional or ignorant about their finances. $525,000 is a top 3% income in American. You don't need to earn more than 97% of Americans to feel happy!

Reader Questions About Millennials

What kind of inheritance expectations did you input into the Retirement Planner? How do we prevent our kids from being unmotivated, non-productive members of society if we have a significant amount of wealth to pass on? Millennials, what have you noticed about your peers when it comes to money? Have you called your parents lately?

Would you work as hard or save as much if you expected a $1M+ inheritance?

View Results

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Check out Fundrise venture, which invests in the following five sectors:

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  • Modern Data Infrastructure
  • Development Operations (DevOps)
  • Financial Technology (FinTech)
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Roughly 35% is invested in artificial intelligence, which I'm bullish about. In 20 years, I don't want my kids wondering why I didn't invest in AI or work in AI! Do you?

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For more nuanced personal finance content, join 60,000+ others and sign up for the free Financial Samurai newsletter. Financial Samurai is one of the largest independently-owned personal finance sites that started in 2009. Everything is written based off firsthand experience. 

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rpsabq
rpsabq
5 months ago

I realize you are reporting from surveys but it seems somewhere along the line you are confusing the generations. It seems to me the Millennials (ie MY children) ARE in deep trouble. Why? Because the Gen Xers are the ones getting the Baby Boomer inheritances. Both me and my kids had to get student loans because my parents were still working. Now the inheritance comes and I pay off my and my wife’s student loan and maybe some or all of my kid’s student loans, buy my wife and I haven’t retired yet. When we do we’re gonna buy a new (smaller) house to retire in (in cash) and new cars to drive us there (in cash) then travel as much as we want to. There ain’t gonna be anything left. My kids will split the half a million dollar condo we bought but that’s about it. Gen Xers are benefitting from the Baby Boomers inheritance not the Millennials because we’re gonna spend it all. No, the Millennials are really in a bit of a bind. Hope they can figure it out.

S Shore
S Shore
1 year ago

Long time reader of the FS content, but I must say this article seems not only far from the reality that most Gen Y’s (millennials) will face in both the near and long term, but also bizarrely builds to a proverbial crescendo leading the reader to surmise that millennial lifestyles are not steeped in poor financial decision making, when indeed that is the precise way to define them.

For contextual reference, I am 30 years of age living in the Bay area. Inheritance came to me early through a series of ‘non traditional’ events that left me with a low 8 figure portfolio of assets to manage – predominantly real estate. Through most metrics of our society, I would be considered more the just well off, and indeed maybe this is true. But as any other reader on this channel in a similar financial position (age aside) can confirm, It feels anything but that. I work every day, save as much as I can, take modest vacations every once in a while and drive a normal car. I hope to one day ‘live it up’ as I see so many millennials do. But actually having that luxury vs fooling yourself into thinking you do is not a mere problem of the millennial generation mindset, it’s a fatal flaw.

The vast majority what the first half of this article reflects is absolutely correct. Working only 15 years? Spending 10-20K on vacations? Who thinks this way? Waiting for the inheritance? Fact of the matter is most people find themselves in their 50/60’s by the time that inheritance comes from their parents. The bay area is a bit of an anomaly in that regard where the wealth transfer may begin prior to when the parents are deceased, but this defines a small subset of people in the grand scheme of things. So for those who can expect ‘the average $1M inheritance’, when their parents pass, whats the plan? Forgo life development and planning for the next 30 years? Keep blowing cash and making financial decisions that set you up for failure? The fact remains. Do millennials spend too much? Absolutely, will they (we) be afforded the same luxuries as the prior generations in terms of ability to build wealth? Not likely. Those with access to the right tools and people will – which is unfortunate. It’s also unfortunate that through some means of justification, a vast majority of people in the Gen Y cohort seem to be blissfully unaware of the reality that is waiting for them in the years to come. They simply cannot see the writing on the walls. Delusional perhaps? Or maybe a sign of the times? …I’ll just chalk it up to low resolution thinking.

BT
BT
3 years ago

When I was six my dad took me back to his childhood house in rural Kansas. Calling it a house is a stretch, more like a sturdy shack. There was a large garden because it was a requirement to have enough to eat. My dad stressed education to us kids. He was ashamed that he could not keep-up with his engineering classes in small state college in Kansas. He became a young Naval pilot. He went on to flying jets off aircraft carriers. He retired as a Naval Commander. His second job was for Lockheed. Every week day I remember he was up before dawn catching-up on take home office work. He made all the kids school lunches before we were out of bed from our earliest school years right up through high school. Both my mom and dad died this year months apart. In hind sight I realize my father accomplished much from humble begins. He had little to be ashamed of. I can honestly say I have not done better than my father even with more opportunities. Much of getting ahead financially requires a strong motivation and the understanding that no one owes you anything. Good luck to those who get a large family inheritance, but don’t truly appreciate the hard effort it may have required to obtain it. Yes generational wealth that goes on and on bugs me, as I think all to often it handicaps the receivers of it to do their best to pay their way. At best I appreciate the very wealthy who have plans in place to give away most of their wealth to charitable causes that reach the most disadvantaged and/or help find treatments to mitigate some of the intense suffering of so many around the globe. I don’t look fondly on the wealthy who “keep it all within the family.”

Artie whitefox
Artie whitefox
3 years ago

Adam and Eve were not renting out the Garden of Eden. People make, people to think that is the case, when they have the consept of paying rent. Adam and Eve were not evicted from the Garden of Eden for not paying rent. That is what God’s image is doing. Satan through them, imitating what God had to do. Pay properties. The earth is God’s, not ours even when a thing that comes from nothing, buys it. Millennials think they are rich and increased with goods having need of nothing. Pre flood people were like that. Jesus who is life is not in their mind. People are thinking, me, me, me, me, me, me, me. They are not warming up their voice to sing. The consept of affordable is nowhere in scripture.

William
William
2 years ago
Reply to  Artie whitefox

I assume English is not your first language, because this makes no sense at all.

Wolf134
Wolf134
3 years ago

Well then, I’d say the title’s really not a fair thing to assume about Millennials in general. I’ve always been interested in money. Moreover, I’ve always been interested in managing that money wisely. On top of that, I would want for my children to be able to build their own wealth, leaving myself just enough money to be reasonably comfortable with, leaving my biological children with a very small percentage of my money, much of it given away to charity, teaching them to be self-reliant, and to think of it as an opportunity with which to build their own wealth. All this so that I may be fully realized as a man, spending the rest of my days at peace knowing my children won’t have to bother me… much.

Edward
Edward
4 years ago

The writer is apart of the generation that caused the greatest recession since the Great Depression. Millennials will end up better educated and richer than your generation mostly because we are more frugal than your generation. I will also remind everybody this guy thinks 200,000 is middle class. Most issues the economy comes from your generations free wheeling with free markets.

Matt
Matt
3 years ago
Reply to  Edward

Its a bunch of ignorant ass bafoonery jabberjawin. The I know it all but dont know shit generation. With the point the finger cant be accountable for anything. That dont talk to or spend time with there kids. Thats the generation that screwed up the world for us Millennials. The fact they cant use a computer and grew up making double the buying power of what I do now. Then want to call us entitled.. At 27 I can run laps around anything my dad generation does. My Grandparents are alot better example of what a man/woman is. The entitled generation at the factory making 30-40 bucks a hr coming home to their own castle. While my generation makes $12.50 an hour and live with 3 roomates just to rent an apartment because all the starter homes are $300k while my parents generation refinance and buy swimming pools. Millinneals are learning how inflation works, how stock market works, how to retire, how finance works, studying all day long to make extra money thats value is half of what it was when they where in 20’s. But same idiots dont even realize how to take advantage of the money they have while it last. Because what they made 5-10 years ago is not the same as what they making now. But you cant tell em a dang thing they grew up reading the same 3 books their whole life. When the internet gives you access to every book written! Why don’t yall older generations humble yourselves and realize we are not the same. We are first level of the next speices working are way through fixing the nightmare economy we adopted from parents who cant respect others let alone stay together. I’m tired of hearing about the poor and struggling being the problem with why they cant waste their money materialistic nonsense. Always the loudest ones in the room with their hands over their ears.

William
William
2 years ago
Reply to  Matt

Matt, you are part of the least educated generation. Your language skills are atrocious, as are your social skills. I must admit that it is my generations fault. We invented the video games and smart phones that damaged your generation.

christina L bell
christina L bell
5 years ago

I realize this article is old, I came across it while researching money topics. I am one of the older millennials at 35 years old and most of my generation that I know don’t fit this article at all. A lot of millennials are renting in apartments that go up every year along with food, education, and child care while income stays the same. I am supposedly middle class, we make $90k per year not including taxes but it sure doesn’t feel like it. My husband and I both have college degrees and with that came student debt. I was very fortunate to be able to pay most of my education at a community college through babysitting. I also paid off my student loan in nine years. My husband was not so lucky and had a much higher cost for education and thus bigger debt by graduation. We are still paying his student loan debt. Our rent here in the midwest for two bedroom 935 sq ft apartment is now over $1200. It increases every year around $20.00. We have been trying to save for a house but that 20% down payment seems like a pipe dream.

As far as inheritance goes, we have zero expectations of that and most of my generation that I know don’t expect it either. My mother-in-law raised four kids as single mother after divorce and then her ex-husband died unexpectedly a few years later. She was living in her Dad’s house that was given to her when he died, but then had a stroke so now is in assisted care. Her medical bills basically took any of her savings she had.

My own parents have also had health issues. My Mom has had skin cancer so then later health insurance wouldn’t take her. My Dad was forced into retirement from the company he had worked for 20+ years when the bosses changed, then recession hit his 401k. He went back to work only to go into kidney failure. He was on dialysis and took two years to get kidney transplant. They both also have medical debt now.

I understand there are people who probably are able to depend on things like 1 million inheritance but I would say most can’t.

Your Leader
Your Leader
4 years ago

Don’t worry Samurai. We will replace capitalism, and with it all your “tips” based on living from profits stole from workers will be gone… Like you. Well, maybe you can live OK with your Universal Basic Income. Not in the US though. Cheers from the first world.

Maeve
Maeve
5 years ago

This article is BS. How many people can expect an inheritance? Also, kudos to all you hard workers. I’m 52 and I’m done with working hard. I want to chill out and relax. Wish I had an inheritance. Working sucks. Why couldn’t I be born into money? Getting older sucks too. I don’t want to live to 100. Hope I die before I get old. Rock n roll.

Shayna Dunn
Shayna Dunn
5 years ago

I chose other, because I have no problem admitting that I’m money hungry, and 1mil wouldn’t cut it….I want to be swimming in bens….

Tyler Borchardt
Tyler Borchardt
5 years ago

Wow, those numbers from that study are shocking, and a little sad. It goes to show that Millennials (my generation) are filled with unrealistic expectations, entitlement, or a mixture of both.

My running joke about inheritance is that I will get “absolutely nothing, divided by 4.” As you can probably guess, my parents have virtually nothing, plus I have 3 other siblings to boot.

That’s OK though, since my natural inclination is to not rely on anybody other than myself for any financial need or goal. I was shocked when my fiance offered to help me pay my student loans; I hadn’t even considered the fact that she would ever give me any money!

Because of all this, I’ve never even entered any inheritance into any retirement planning calculators I’ve used. Even if I had parents that were loaded, I would feel very uncomfortable making major financial decisions based solely on someone giving me a lot of money a long time in the future.

Chris
Chris
5 years ago

I’m pretty close to the middle of the millennial generation. I’m 29.

I don’t really like the word millennial. It sounds like a flower or something. Although, who thought naming a generation of people baby boomers was a great idea? lol. It seems like old people always think the younger people are little babies or flowers or something. I am not a flower. I do realize though that younger generations, including millennials really are facing some difficult financial obstacles which will likely get worse in the future. One thing though that I think people forget is that life has always been difficult. Millennials may have to pay more for healthcare, housing, and education, but we also haven’t as of yet had to fight in a world war for example or other terrible things other generations have been through.

There is great hope for the future. I believe firmly that humanity’s best days are ahead, not behind. We will face difficulties as all generations of people have, but there will be great things ahead for us as well. The line from a book comes to mind. “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times.”. I think the future holds both the best of times and the worst of times, but overall the best of times will ultimately prevail and the future will be very bright. If you think just from a physics perspective, good is more efficient than evil and so from purely that perspective, evil is unsustainable and will ultimately succumb to good. Maybe not in individuals, but on a macro scale. This is a true principle.

I also use Personal capital a lot and I love their retirement simulators. The way I have decided to try to get ahead is through something called house hacking. My plan is basically to buy multi family investment properties with small down payments by owner occupying. I have owned and lived in a 4-plex for about 2 years now. I am planning on buying another one in another year or two and living in it for a while also. I’m really just going to keep buying investment properties until it gets to the point that I obviously should buy myself a house.

For any normal person reading this, this can be a golden key to get out of the long term financial problems other people will face. Live frugally and buy multifamily investment properties with small down payments such as FHA loans.. And yes there are ways to buy more than one this way. Think for a sec. If you buy a 600k property for 3.5% down and live in it… You gain almost 100% equity yearly just from inflation. If you put that same money in stocks, you’ll get like 10% a year rather than 100%. The only other thing to do is be careful and charge less rent than you need to in order to attract fantastic tenants and always do background checks and credit checks. When I started, I had to evict some drug dealers and other criminals from the building I was living in. Don’t expect it to be 100% easy, but if you have a good strategy, it can work out very well.

Also though, I do invest in a 401k and also have a pension. I’m not against the stock market and I do invest in it, but it isn’t the only way to go.

I barely graduated high school. In fact I didn’t graduate, but I did go back later and get a GED. I haven’t been to college so I have no student loan debt and I taught myself to code. I am also married now and have a little daughter. Marriage and family life will bring you true joy. Make that your highest priority in life. I’m serious. Good things will follow if you build a family and treat them well.

Anyway, I just want you all to know that things will work out. Create a long term plan for the future for all areas of your life and then make it so. The future is bright. Things will work out. Be smart with how you use your time and energy. Be strategic and revisit your strategy regularly and make course corrections. A good strategy executed over a long time can be very powerful.

Realist
Realist
5 years ago

The numbers needed to retire on this website are a joke. If people really needed that much to retire the entire system would collapse in 20 years because only 5% of the population are coming close to the 401k savings needed to retire. Healthcare costs and college tuition are essentially a bubble that’s going to burst. My 401k calculator calculates that by 2045 my healthcare premium costs will be $9850 a month. They base this off an algorithm based off current healthcare premium increases in the last decade. Shits gonna hit the fan…. the best investment is in physical guns.

Allen C
Allen C
6 years ago

Hi, I’m 24 years old and about to graduate undergrad with a bachelors in STEM. I took a 180 and decided to take a job at an investment bank. My dad was an immigrant and became a physician who worked very hard and saved frugally his entire career. My mom was a teacher and met my dad in college. I grew up somewhat privileged, but my brother and I had no idea how much in total my family really had.

The house I grew up in is currently worth 1.7M, 2 weekend getaway downtown condos are about 600k a piece, and 4 additional houses around the suburbs 200-300k my dad bought for his mom and other relatives under his name. I will not have student debt and have capital inside brokerage accounts and retirement accounts. I recently went to my family’s wealth management meeting and saw the portfolio value to be 16M. They established an irrevocable trust, meaning they cannot take money out, but only put money in. This is to ensure the government intervention. My brother and I will eventually inherit this compounded amount without the government touching anything over 10M each, given my brother and I are both married.

I don’t flash around vanity, and I try my hardest to keep finances out of friendships and relationships. That’s probably the most difficult part of growing up affluent. I don’t have the drive like I see in others, which I sometimes envy but at the end of the day, I wholeheartedly respect those who are so driven and ambitious in a cutthroat world. Right now I find I have a lot of free time, and I’m grateful for each day by exploring new things that fulfill me.

Allen C
Allen C
6 years ago
Reply to  Allen C

Whoops, meant to say this will ensure the government will NOT intervene.

Regina
Regina
6 years ago

Dear “Financial Samurai,” (are you Asian? If not, that business name is racist in the public domain)

This is a grossly inaccurate article, which is sad and confusing coming from such a well self-accredited financial advisor. Check your numbers, or reality, whichever is easier for you to comprehend. As a millennial, I live thousands of dollars below the poverty line, expect no inheritance, have no faith in social security as an institution to benefit my generation in any way, shape, or form. I don’t expect to ever retire (that’s honestly a laughable concept), and I don’t expect to ever earn close to anything my parents did over their lifetime, because folks in your generation have the money.

If you live in a house, GFY.
If you can afford to have, and support a family, GFY.
If you have enough food for yourself, and others, GFY.
If you’ve personally benefited form any inheritance, GFY.
Honestly, va te faire foutre, because you have absolutely no idea what you’re talking about, no sense of what millennials face as a generation, financially, or socially, and no grounding in reality likely due to your personal wealth.

Be grateful for what you have, and have the humility not to slander an entire generation of people that’ll be wiping your old ass one day.

Rob
Rob
6 years ago
Reply to  Regina

#1 – He is Asian American but even if he wasn’t it wouldn’t be racist. At worst, it would be “cultural appropriation.” Racism is the belief that races are superior or inferior to others. A white or black person wanting to be a samurai in no way would imply racism, no more than an Asian kid dreaming of being John Wayne or Bruce Willis be racist.

#2 – While a huge % of millennials will not inherit, a large % will. It’s simple math. There are over 10 million households worth at least a million bucks and most of that will pass onto a millennial [plus many more with over 250k].

#3 – Your attitude is horrible. I grew up poor, zero money for college, no private schools, no inheritance, started off making just above minimum wage as a cashier at a grocery store; 15 years later I now make more than $300k/year with zero financial assistance from anyone. It took a lot of time (both extra hours, unpaid usually, at work as well as education both through the system – adult undergrad + mba programs on my own dime – and ~2 hrs of research a night on my own from home on various thing) and I had to forego a LOT of friend time while building my career and a decent amount of family time to achieve what I have.

TLDR of #3 – stop whining, start doing

Rob
Rob
6 years ago

“Do not forget to be entertained sometimes. Life is more fun this way.”

Agreed! Once I hit the ~$200k/yr mark a couple years ago I drastically reigned in my hours as I no longer desired to keep moving up corporate America like I was earlier in my career (although still got promoted from Sr Dir to VP since then). I actually work the fewest hours/wk now (45-55 hr/wk~90% of the time) than I ever have since I joined the workforce because I don’t care if I ever make it to CFO at this point and I take at least 3 week long vacations per year now vs only 1-2 earlier in my career.

El
El
5 years ago
Reply to  Rob

lol you people are so blinded by your own experience and privilege its unreal.

and save the unverifiable anecdotes that curiously always indirectly promote free labour as a necessity to get a good job.

too much is being demanded on our generation with very little return if not outright lies. all in an effort to further blind is to the reality that we have and continue to be exploited, scammed and lied to for the benefit of the already established members of society.

blaming out very real problems on us and accusing us of this and that is not only not helpful, but actually very destructive. youre writing an article for click bait— a lesser exploitation of our disposition.

Stu
Stu
5 years ago
Reply to  El

Ever been to war or shot at on the street, have a medical event, been a missionary to Haiti? Every generation ahs challenges. Thank God for what you DO have, get to work, save your money, spend less, and DO NOT Quit. Have hope. We live in the most prosperous country in human history. Try your best to join it while helping others along the way. Make goog moral decisions all the way and it will work out. I believe in you, so belive in yourself and just try to keep moving forward. If an idiot like me from Arkansas can do it, I know YOU can!

Tyler Borchardt
Tyler Borchardt
5 years ago
Reply to  Regina

Rob’s entire comment is basically saying that this article is bogus based only on Rob’s personal experience.

SG
SG
7 years ago

Better have good life when you’re young. You might not survive to pension.

And it’s better to invest money somewhere than put into bank. And move to cheaper place than USA or Europe (Russia, Taiwan)

B.A.Gates
B.A.Gates
7 years ago

At the age of 27 I fall in this range and do not care about the fiat economy,money,or work. This is due to with 10 years of post secondary and 13 years of grade school most of my generation was told we will amount to nothing boy were they wrong I made 1.3 billion cdn dollars and gave it all away due to I seen the damage it causes as a slave tool for millions of canadians and that is exactly what it is a slave tool, with a false hope of making more when in reality most companys do not even adjust for cost of living and the tax hikes are insaine if you live on 50k a year your not living but slowly dieing from 40 to 90 hours a week only thing that is defying this it 30% of population live longer each year, due to medication and serility.

Now the reason why I gave what some call a fortune away is because I knoticed that everyone in my neighborhood was working their peverbial asses off and making dick 50k or less usually 20k to 30k not including the cost for school and thier spoiled wives expensive habits including a nice home more less I knoticed humanity lost sight of the bigger picture it is not about money or work it is about evolution (which proven fact we are sped up evolution not natural but most will deny this because of ignorance to see what is infront of them) anywho once I realized this I went around and asked what do you think would make the world work and care about money they all almost answered (money and work does not matter all that matters is at the end of my life I can go out my way and people will understand) needless to say I found this statment odd and disturbing then for the next six years I sat on my hands living on 22k a year only to come to my conclusion when people make less and see the damage from a false economy they tend to bo longer care I too had begun thinking like my neighbors enough is enough I sold my company for resources and then sold the resources took my total 1.3B $ and asked my accountant to make as many 500k checks receiveable by anyone that cashed them and placed 1 in every mail box in my neighborhood then went to the next and the next till I was down to 500k myself. I made everyone equal in theory and I started to see a positive reaction around me everyone was happy again working less and you could see life comeback to them. Needless to say I discovered humans would rather die than work for 10% of nothing and after asking around again how people were doing they said that their heath was up they could spend time with loved ones and surprisingly many also said they had the time to teach and train their husbands wives and kids. Mad me realize unless you make 100k a year at 20 hours a week minimum your quality of life rapidly declines. I ask a few government financial advisors why this is and every single one told me the fiat economy and money as we know it are tools we use to control people so that many cannot succeed in hopes of lowering population. I knoe this whole story may seem far fetched but I personally can say this all happened in reality and I’m glad it did because I too am now worthless just like the rest of our primitive race we hold the vaule of resources and money above life when in fact we need to hold life and quality of life above it all and disband the fiat economy and let evolution take over for another 4million years or yes we will all die with the greed of money so for those who say my generation do not care you are right we do not and this is because most have real genuine lack of hope not that they are waiting for their parents to die to get money these days if a person is not happy with dirt then they need either a bullet or none existance

Micha
Micha
7 years ago

The problem here is that you took data from a set that obviously only targets people planning for and expecting to retire. I keep seeing sources claiming that 2/3 of millennials don’t expect to EVER be able to retire, so you’re already sampling only the top 33%. I expect this is further limited by the location of the surveying business, which is presumably a wealthy privileged east coast area.

I’ve been working full-time (college grad) for 10 years, and have never earned over 25k per year underbidding the hell out of my parents’ generation to get the work those motherfuckers refuse to retire out of. I, and most of my contemporaries, would find it hilarious that you consider 30k a conservative cost of living. A lot of us don’t and can’t afford to live near the coasts or in urban areas, precisely because it’s expensive.

I don’t care about money beyond my ability to pay my bills and eat. I studied economics, and can easily see that labor is currently a buyer’s market. I also watched my parents lose their retirement savings twice in ’01 and ’08. Wages are stagnant or contracting depending on your industry even as productivity rises. Millennial contempt for money is real, but it’s not about the rich twats you’re talking about here, it’s about despairing of the concept of generating any lasting wealth or attaining any level of financial security.

Samantha
Samantha
8 years ago

My parents have a net worth of about $5m in real estate, but I still work extremely hard. I’ve never added an inheritance to my calculations because I don’t think it’s something that should be taken for granted. You just never know how family relationships will turn out in the future, or if catastrophe will strike.

I agree; I’ve seen a huge sense of entitlement in many of my peers, and a mentality of blowing money like it grows on trees. It’s a relief to come across your site and not feel so alone in my financial mindset, which often makes me feel isolated from my friends and coworkers.

I’m a 23 year old living in the Bay Area like yourself. I commute 40 miles each way for work (80 mi roundtrip) – I’ve put 18,600 miles on my car since January of this year – to live with my parents. I save 50%-65% of my take-home pay which is not easy considering I don’t make a software engineer’s salary and I only have 2 years of work experience.

Instead of renting a room for nearly half my take-home pay, I purchased a home with my mom as a co-signer. It’s not a great neighborhood and even further from work, so I still live with my parents and rent the entire house out. I get $400/month after the mortgage and expenses. It appraised 8 months after we bought it for an over 10% return on our downpayment. I need to pay my mom back the downpayment (I’m about 15% of the way there), but I’m feeling happy at the financial stability I’ve begun to create. I’ve surpassed the extreme net worth goal you’ve outlined for 25 year olds by saving, not counting the appreciation of my home. But I still have a ways to go and tons to learn.

I am motivated out of a desire to repay my parents for everything they have done for me. Maybe it’s the Asian side of me coming out but I want to take care of them when they’re old, and given that they had me when they were 40, I don’t have much time! I’ve also had excellent role models in my older sister (38 and no longer works) and brother (just purchased a $2m home, has millions in other investments). They started from zero, hustled, and sacrificed to get where they are today. I am lucky in that regard–I think a lot of my fellow millennials don’t have family members who can demonstrate the beauty of living within/below your means to achieve financial freedom.

Zach
Zach
8 years ago

Very interesting about the inheritance part! The funny thing, I’m in that same boat. I didn’t know the situation was so widespread. And yes, I’ll admit it puts a healthy damper on my independent motivation.

Expounding on just the inheritance topic, I think the biggest risk to any aged parents’ assets is healthcare, especially nursing home care. I’ve seen friends’ families lose the entirety of a potential multi-six-figure inheritance to nursing homes and hospitals. Amazingly to me, these friends didn’t seem to care, thinking, “well, it wasn’t my money, so whatever.” When combined with a “self-made” social culture where each generation expects to start out from zero on their own, it seems the system is designed this way, to opportunistically mop up old folks’ money and prevent generational family wealth transfer.

But a major factor allowing this situation in the US in particular is a cultural lack of interpersonal trust. If family members are apt to screw over one another, or to be stupidly wasteful or risky with money, then there is no hope of safely pre-planning to prevent such a loss. But if family members can truly trust each other and be responsible (as was the case between my parents and grandparents), then it’s far better to slowly legally transfer over as much wealth as possible years before potentially expecting to get sick. By the time my grandparents needed major healthcare and nursing home care, there were nearly no assets legally left in their name for a number of years already, and therefore nothing to be taken, and so insurance covered everything (I think there is a legal 5 or 7 year period before it’s “not theirs” from a healthcare point of view). Sadly, in this age of family lawsuits and divorces and selfishness, this approach probably wouldn’t be practical for most families.

LKY West
LKY West
8 years ago

I wonder what average or poor millenials think about their life…

That 1M$ inheritance entitlement it’s just spot on. Coming from an average family to a top 3 high school, the “where’s the crystal In my yacht in ibiza” just haunts everyone.

Some of their parents even have lived that life and now are paying their dues, but still raise spoiled brats lol

Regina
Regina
6 years ago
Reply to  LKY West

Go have an earnest conversation with someone in the age group you’re slandering.
See if you still have the ability to change your mind.

Margaret
Margaret
8 years ago

As a second year engineering student, I am disgusted by the lack of awareness many of my peers have regarding their financial future (and present). I have seen so many lazy and overpaid workers at my customer service work study job, it makes me want to vomit. We all get paid $11 an hour to process a few packages and wait around for customers to show up. People have the nerve to complain and do the few simple tasks they have to do incorrectly. Very few people show enough pride in their work to do more than the bare minimum.

Many of my peers don’t value their education at all simply because they are not the ones paying for it. They know their parents will pay their way through life.

On the other hand, I’ve worked harder than anybody my age I’ve ever met. This might be because I’m aware I will have loans to pay, my retirement to plan for, and the retirement of my parents; I’d say it’s because I see the value in the work I do. If I find myself talking about my job(s), it blows their mind that I would work more than 40 hours a week.

I’m horrified

Chris
Chris
8 years ago

I am one of the last years of Gen Xers. I worked multiple jobs in high school, college, and the real world, have saved like a fiend for retirement and am about on Sam’s above average track for net worth for my age. I would be thrilled if I didn’t end up supporting my parents at some point. Inheritance? Not so much. I do have friends who expect to receive something, but not so many. And if you are depending on that, you are delusional unless your parents are not just well off, but downright rich. A few years in a nursing home can wipe out a portfolio in a hurry. Better to make it on your own. Really enjoy reading your thoughts, Sam!

Andy
Andy
8 years ago

Umm..have you looked at actual savings rate for boomer generation, not just those who entered data into wealthfront?

Because financial retirement planners have given me a very different picture about American savings rate, so the wealth transfer may not be as large as you think…perhaps

Denise
Denise
8 years ago

Nothing is certain, and I’d feel like a dope if I lived my life planning on a $1 million dollar windfall and it didn’t end up coming for one reason or other. Hell, they could outlive me! Plus $1 million dollars isn’t even enough for my ideal nest egg size. It’s not like I could live a dramatically different life with $1 million dollars. There’s always ways to increase and expand the family fortune. There’s no reason it should be earned in a generation and spent in the next generation. I do think this contributes to wealth inequality and that wealth inequality is a huge problem. The way I’d view such an inheritance is that it’s something to be preserved and grown for the benefit of future generations who may need it, and expanded to help others outside the immediate family.

MateoC
MateoC
8 years ago

I am a 16 year old boy that cares about his future ( hence why i am on this site), but this article is completly true people now just see pictures on twitter of 20 through 28 year olds with a lot of money and believe it is true but do not acknowledge the fact that it is just a picture on social media.

Regina
Regina
6 years ago
Reply to  MateoC

Buddy, the world is horrifying and poor. 20 somethings aren’t rich. If it appears so, they’re still supported by their parents. We call this the 1%. If you don’t have nice things, you probably don’t belong to this percentage. Most of us don’t. I’m sorry. Social media is toxic, delete your Twitter.