Americans’ Financial Confidence On Decline Since 2020, Allianz Life Study Finds
Fewer Americans think they will be able to financially support all their goals in life.
KEY FINDINGS:
- 61% feel confident about meeting their savings goal for retirement
- 55% are saving enough in a retirement account
- 62% worry that another national or global financial crisis in the near future would derail their retirement strategy
Americans' financial confidence has declined significantly in the last five years and many do not think they are saving enough for retirement, according to the 2025 Annual Retirement Study* from the
In 2025, just 70% of Americans say they feel confident about their ability to financially support everything they want to do in life. This has decreased every year since 2020 when 83% said they felt confident. Fewer (61%) feel confident specifically about meeting their savings goal for retirement.
The top actions Americans think would help ensure they could financially support all the things they want to do are to set financial goals and develop plans to reach them (96%) and develop a long-term plan to determine how much money they will need and when (96%). Nearly half of Americans (47%) say they do not have any written financial plans.
“Lack of financial confidence often is because of a lack of planning,” says
Few Americans say they are saving enough in a retirement account (55%). This has decreased in all of the last five years. Millennials are least likely to say they are saving enough for retirement (48%), compared to Gen Xers (59%) and boomers (74%).
Recession fears increasing
At the same time, Americans are increasingly worried about a recession affecting how much they can save for retirement (30%, up from 25% in 2024) and taxes taking a big chunk out of their retirement funds (26%, up from 18% in 2024).
This worry could be driven by ongoing worries about a national or global financial crisis. Nearly two in three (62%) say they are concerned that another national or global financial crisis in the near future would derail their retirement strategy. Even so, just 46% say they have incorporated the potential implications of future national or global financial crises into their financial retirement plan.
“While risks to your retirement like a recession are out of your control, you can create a financial strategy that addresses how you will mitigate the risk in the future,” LaVigne says. “As you create that strategy, it’s critical to work with financial institutions that are also preparing for the long-term to bolster your confidence.”
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