海蒂·巴利兒時(shí)目睹過(guò)家人用食品券購(gòu)買(mǎi)雜貨的場(chǎng)景。上大學(xué)時(shí),又曾因無(wú)力負(fù)擔(dān)學(xué)費(fèi)而輟學(xué)。二十多歲時(shí),本已艱難度日的她又遭遇減薪,年收入降至僅3.4萬(wàn)美元。但今年夏天,41歲的她終于實(shí)現(xiàn)了多年夙愿——成為百萬(wàn)富翁。
如今,躋身百萬(wàn)富翁行列的普通美國(guó)人數(shù)量激增,這一階層曾是名人富豪和企業(yè)高管的專(zhuān)屬。但隨著百萬(wàn)富翁隊(duì)伍的擴(kuò)大,其身份象征意義正在發(fā)生變化,人們對(duì)“富豪”的定義也已今非昔比。
加利福尼亞州埃爾塞貢多財(cái)富管理機(jī)構(gòu)Running Point Capital Advisors首席投資官邁克爾·阿什利·舒爾曼指出:“過(guò)去,人們想到百萬(wàn)富翁,腦海里浮現(xiàn)的是《大富翁》游戲里戴著大禮帽的‘錢(qián)袋子叔叔’形象。如今,這一稱(chēng)號(hào)已不再是出入豪門(mén)盛宴的通行證,而是成了平民富裕階層的代名詞,雖然財(cái)務(wù)安全,但離私人飛機(jī)還差兩個(gè)零。”
在通貨膨脹、房?jī)r(jià)飆升的推動(dòng)下,加之普通投資者數(shù)十年如一日持續(xù)投資股市獲得的豐厚回報(bào),數(shù)百萬(wàn)美國(guó)人邁入百萬(wàn)富翁行列。瑞銀集團(tuán)(UBS)6月發(fā)布的一份報(bào)告顯示,已有約十分之一的美國(guó)成年人躋身百萬(wàn)富翁俱樂(lè)部(指資產(chǎn)達(dá)到7位數(shù)),并且去年每天都會(huì)新增約1000名百萬(wàn)富翁。
根據(jù)《2025年瑞銀全球財(cái)富報(bào)告》(2025 UBS Global Wealth Report),自2000年以來(lái),“平民百萬(wàn)富翁”(EMILLIs)群體大幅擴(kuò)大。報(bào)告指出,“財(cái)富大轉(zhuǎn)移”和房?jī)r(jià)飆升是推動(dòng)這一趨勢(shì)的主要因素。
貧富差距進(jìn)一步擴(kuò)大
美國(guó)國(guó)稅局(IRS)統(tǒng)計(jì)顯示,30年前,擁有100萬(wàn)美元或以上凈資產(chǎn)的美國(guó)人有160萬(wàn)。而據(jù)瑞銀依據(jù)聯(lián)合國(guó)、世界銀行、國(guó)際貨幣基金組織以及全球各國(guó)央行的數(shù)據(jù)估計(jì),去年美國(guó)這一數(shù)字已達(dá)到2380萬(wàn)——增長(zhǎng)了接近15倍。
在百萬(wàn)富翁群體不斷擴(kuò)大的同時(shí),貧富差距也日漸明顯。根據(jù)美聯(lián)儲(chǔ)的數(shù)據(jù),美國(guó)最富有10%人口掌握著三分之二的家庭財(cái)富,其人均財(cái)富平均達(dá)到810萬(wàn)美元。而底層50%的人口僅擁有3%的財(cái)富,名下平均資產(chǎn)僅為6萬(wàn)美元。
美聯(lián)儲(chǔ)數(shù)據(jù)還揭示了種族間財(cái)富差異,在美國(guó),亞裔群體的財(cái)富中位數(shù)已超越白人群體,而黑人和西班牙裔群體的凈資產(chǎn)水平則相對(duì)較低。
“不如想象中那般光鮮亮麗”
巴利做記者時(shí),由于報(bào)社終止了養(yǎng)老金計(jì)劃,她獲得一筆約5000美元的一次性補(bǔ)償。在同事勸說(shuō)下,她將這筆錢(qián)投入退休賬戶,自此便養(yǎng)成了定期儲(chǔ)蓄的習(xí)慣。這些投資雖然在大衰退初期有所下跌,但最終實(shí)現(xiàn)增值。漸漸地,她發(fā)現(xiàn)儲(chǔ)蓄能給自己帶來(lái)心靈慰藉,每當(dāng)工作不順時(shí),她就會(huì)回家查一下賬戶余額,以此為自己解壓。
上個(gè)月,在又一次經(jīng)歷這樣的日子后,她意識(shí)到那個(gè)量變到質(zhì)變的時(shí)刻到了。
她問(wèn)丈夫:“你知道嗎?咱倆現(xiàn)在也是百萬(wàn)富翁了。”
“干得漂亮,親愛(ài)的,”她丈夫平靜地答道,語(yǔ)氣波瀾不驚。
這件事并未立刻改變她的生活方式。和許多百萬(wàn)富翁一樣,她的財(cái)富主要沉淀在長(zhǎng)期投資組合與房產(chǎn)之中,而非容易變現(xiàn)的流動(dòng)資產(chǎn)。如今她依然住在佛羅里達(dá)州奧蘭多那棟樸實(shí)無(wú)華的老房子里,照樣將半數(shù)工資存入儲(chǔ)蓄賬戶,還會(huì)把外賣(mài)附贈(zèng)的餐巾紙塞滿家用紙巾盒,甚至堅(jiān)持用超市購(gòu)物袋當(dāng)垃圾袋。
不過(guò)巴利也坦言,擁有這么一大筆兒時(shí)不敢想象的財(cái)富仍讓她感覺(jué)充滿力量。
“但百萬(wàn)富翁的生活其實(shí)并沒(méi)有想象中那么光鮮亮麗,” 她說(shuō)。
財(cái)富的多少?zèng)]有絕對(duì)的衡量標(biāo)準(zhǔn)。對(duì)千元戶而言,百萬(wàn)美元是遙不可及的夢(mèng)想,而在億萬(wàn)富豪眼中,這不過(guò)是賬戶余額中的一點(diǎn)零錢(qián)。不過(guò)無(wú)論采用哪種視角,要想達(dá)到三十年前的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力,我們手里持有的美元現(xiàn)金都要翻倍才行。
根據(jù)美國(guó)勞工統(tǒng)計(jì)局(Bureau of Labor Statistics)數(shù)據(jù)測(cè)算,1995年100萬(wàn)美元凈資產(chǎn)的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力與2025年約210萬(wàn)美元的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力相當(dāng)。
過(guò)時(shí)的夢(mèng)想
對(duì)某些人而言,7位數(shù)的凈資產(chǎn),已成為與6位數(shù)年薪同樣過(guò)時(shí)的目標(biāo)。盡管如此,“百萬(wàn)富翁”這個(gè)稱(chēng)謂仍充斥在從政治到流行音樂(lè)的各個(gè)領(lǐng)域,成為財(cái)富的代名詞。
“這個(gè)數(shù)字確實(shí)好看,但在財(cái)富積累的漫長(zhǎng)征途中不過(guò)是個(gè)微不足道的節(jié)點(diǎn)”,41歲的丹·尤登說(shuō),這位來(lái)自羅德島州普羅維登斯的信息技術(shù)從業(yè)者,上月剛跨過(guò)百萬(wàn)美元的財(cái)富門(mén)檻,“不過(guò)跨過(guò)這個(gè)門(mén)檻后你肯定能稍微松口氣。”
根據(jù)瑞銀集團(tuán)的研究,美國(guó)的百萬(wàn)富翁絕對(duì)數(shù)量在全球遙遙領(lǐng)先,但若以人口比例衡量,瑞士和盧森堡的百萬(wàn)富翁密度更高。
印第安納大學(xué)凱利商學(xué)院金融學(xué)教授肯尼思·卡羅指出,當(dāng)代百萬(wàn)富翁群體呈現(xiàn)出三大共性特征:絕大多數(shù)持有股票與房產(chǎn),生活普遍恪守量入為出原則,且尤為重視教育傳承與子女理財(cái)責(zé)任培養(yǎng)。
卡羅說(shuō):“成為百萬(wàn)富翁的夢(mèng)想正變得越來(lái)越觸手可及。”
吉姆?王現(xiàn)年45歲,來(lái)自馬里蘭州富爾頓,曾為軟件工程師,現(xiàn)轉(zhuǎn)行金融博主,在談及自己的財(cái)富觀時(shí),他說(shuō),即便達(dá)到百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)對(duì)他和妻子而言不算什么大事,但作為曾在冬季的寒夜里靠關(guān)暖氣省錢(qián)的移民后代,這一成就仍頗具分量。
雖然少時(shí)憧憬的私人飛機(jī)未在資產(chǎn)越過(guò)百萬(wàn)門(mén)檻時(shí)如期而至,但這筆財(cái)富仍給他帶來(lái)了一定程度的安全感。
“即使做著普通工作,也完全有可能坐擁百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)”, 他篤定道,“只需做到勤勉不懈、持之以恒即可。”
FIRE運(yùn)動(dòng)
受益于穩(wěn)健的金融市場(chǎng),以及覆蓋廣泛、費(fèi)率低廉、投資方便的指數(shù)基金,許多人在既無(wú)巨額薪酬、也未繼承家產(chǎn)的情況下迅速完成財(cái)富積累,成功躋身百萬(wàn)富翁行列。
其中就包括在FIRE(Financial Independence Retire Early,簡(jiǎn)稱(chēng)FIRE,意為“財(cái)務(wù)獨(dú)立、提早退休”)運(yùn)動(dòng)中崛起的年輕百萬(wàn)富翁群體。
48歲的杰森·布雷克來(lái)自印第安納州費(fèi)希爾市,作為FIRE運(yùn)動(dòng)的忠實(shí)擁躉,其在九年前進(jìn)入“百萬(wàn)美元”俱樂(lè)部。達(dá)成這一目標(biāo)后,他立即辭去了自己的汽車(chē)營(yíng)銷(xiāo)工作,辭職前他的年薪只有約6萬(wàn)美元,卻設(shè)法存下了自己70%的收入。
現(xiàn)在,布雷克與妻子每年都會(huì)花數(shù)月時(shí)間四處旅行。盡管已經(jīng)退休,他們?nèi)酝ㄟ^(guò)嚴(yán)格預(yù)算持續(xù)擴(kuò)大自己的財(cái)富,身處美國(guó)本土?xí)r,他們會(huì)將月支出嚴(yán)格控制在1500美元以內(nèi),旅行期間也僅會(huì)增加數(shù)百美元消費(fèi)。
實(shí)現(xiàn)財(cái)富目標(biāo)后,二人依然過(guò)著簡(jiǎn)樸的生活,沒(méi)有雇傭家政打理草坪,沒(méi)有開(kāi)通網(wǎng)飛或亞馬遜視頻會(huì)員,也不使用外賣(mài)服務(wù)。他們會(huì)在出行時(shí)選擇經(jīng)濟(jì)艙,座駕仍是2005年的豐田轎車(chē)。
“百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)已不再是通往奢華生活的金鑰匙”,布雷克說(shuō),“其給我們帶來(lái)的是自由與內(nèi)心的平靜。我們雖然買(mǎi)不起游艇,卻獲得了寶貴的時(shí)間自由。”(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:梁宇
審校:夏林
海蒂·巴利兒時(shí)目睹過(guò)家人用食品券購(gòu)買(mǎi)雜貨的場(chǎng)景。上大學(xué)時(shí),又曾因無(wú)力負(fù)擔(dān)學(xué)費(fèi)而輟學(xué)。二十多歲時(shí),本已艱難度日的她又遭遇減薪,年收入降至僅3.4萬(wàn)美元。但今年夏天,41歲的她終于實(shí)現(xiàn)了多年夙愿——成為百萬(wàn)富翁。
如今,躋身百萬(wàn)富翁行列的普通美國(guó)人數(shù)量激增,這一階層曾是名人富豪和企業(yè)高管的專(zhuān)屬。但隨著百萬(wàn)富翁隊(duì)伍的擴(kuò)大,其身份象征意義正在發(fā)生變化,人們對(duì)“富豪”的定義也已今非昔比。
加利福尼亞州埃爾塞貢多財(cái)富管理機(jī)構(gòu)Running Point Capital Advisors首席投資官邁克爾·阿什利·舒爾曼指出:“過(guò)去,人們想到百萬(wàn)富翁,腦海里浮現(xiàn)的是《大富翁》游戲里戴著大禮帽的‘錢(qián)袋子叔叔’形象。如今,這一稱(chēng)號(hào)已不再是出入豪門(mén)盛宴的通行證,而是成了平民富裕階層的代名詞,雖然財(cái)務(wù)安全,但離私人飛機(jī)還差兩個(gè)零。”
在通貨膨脹、房?jī)r(jià)飆升的推動(dòng)下,加之普通投資者數(shù)十年如一日持續(xù)投資股市獲得的豐厚回報(bào),數(shù)百萬(wàn)美國(guó)人邁入百萬(wàn)富翁行列。瑞銀集團(tuán)(UBS)6月發(fā)布的一份報(bào)告顯示,已有約十分之一的美國(guó)成年人躋身百萬(wàn)富翁俱樂(lè)部(指資產(chǎn)達(dá)到7位數(shù)),并且去年每天都會(huì)新增約1000名百萬(wàn)富翁。
根據(jù)《2025年瑞銀全球財(cái)富報(bào)告》(2025 UBS Global Wealth Report),自2000年以來(lái),“平民百萬(wàn)富翁”(EMILLIs)群體大幅擴(kuò)大。報(bào)告指出,“財(cái)富大轉(zhuǎn)移”和房?jī)r(jià)飆升是推動(dòng)這一趨勢(shì)的主要因素。
貧富差距進(jìn)一步擴(kuò)大
美國(guó)國(guó)稅局(IRS)統(tǒng)計(jì)顯示,30年前,擁有100萬(wàn)美元或以上凈資產(chǎn)的美國(guó)人有160萬(wàn)。而據(jù)瑞銀依據(jù)聯(lián)合國(guó)、世界銀行、國(guó)際貨幣基金組織以及全球各國(guó)央行的數(shù)據(jù)估計(jì),去年美國(guó)這一數(shù)字已達(dá)到2380萬(wàn)——增長(zhǎng)了接近15倍。
在百萬(wàn)富翁群體不斷擴(kuò)大的同時(shí),貧富差距也日漸明顯。根據(jù)美聯(lián)儲(chǔ)的數(shù)據(jù),美國(guó)最富有10%人口掌握著三分之二的家庭財(cái)富,其人均財(cái)富平均達(dá)到810萬(wàn)美元。而底層50%的人口僅擁有3%的財(cái)富,名下平均資產(chǎn)僅為6萬(wàn)美元。
美聯(lián)儲(chǔ)數(shù)據(jù)還揭示了種族間財(cái)富差異,在美國(guó),亞裔群體的財(cái)富中位數(shù)已超越白人群體,而黑人和西班牙裔群體的凈資產(chǎn)水平則相對(duì)較低。
“不如想象中那般光鮮亮麗”
巴利做記者時(shí),由于報(bào)社終止了養(yǎng)老金計(jì)劃,她獲得一筆約5000美元的一次性補(bǔ)償。在同事勸說(shuō)下,她將這筆錢(qián)投入退休賬戶,自此便養(yǎng)成了定期儲(chǔ)蓄的習(xí)慣。這些投資雖然在大衰退初期有所下跌,但最終實(shí)現(xiàn)增值。漸漸地,她發(fā)現(xiàn)儲(chǔ)蓄能給自己帶來(lái)心靈慰藉,每當(dāng)工作不順時(shí),她就會(huì)回家查一下賬戶余額,以此為自己解壓。
上個(gè)月,在又一次經(jīng)歷這樣的日子后,她意識(shí)到那個(gè)量變到質(zhì)變的時(shí)刻到了。
她問(wèn)丈夫:“你知道嗎?咱倆現(xiàn)在也是百萬(wàn)富翁了。”
“干得漂亮,親愛(ài)的,”她丈夫平靜地答道,語(yǔ)氣波瀾不驚。
這件事并未立刻改變她的生活方式。和許多百萬(wàn)富翁一樣,她的財(cái)富主要沉淀在長(zhǎng)期投資組合與房產(chǎn)之中,而非容易變現(xiàn)的流動(dòng)資產(chǎn)。如今她依然住在佛羅里達(dá)州奧蘭多那棟樸實(shí)無(wú)華的老房子里,照樣將半數(shù)工資存入儲(chǔ)蓄賬戶,還會(huì)把外賣(mài)附贈(zèng)的餐巾紙塞滿家用紙巾盒,甚至堅(jiān)持用超市購(gòu)物袋當(dāng)垃圾袋。
不過(guò)巴利也坦言,擁有這么一大筆兒時(shí)不敢想象的財(cái)富仍讓她感覺(jué)充滿力量。
“但百萬(wàn)富翁的生活其實(shí)并沒(méi)有想象中那么光鮮亮麗,” 她說(shuō)。
財(cái)富的多少?zèng)]有絕對(duì)的衡量標(biāo)準(zhǔn)。對(duì)千元戶而言,百萬(wàn)美元是遙不可及的夢(mèng)想,而在億萬(wàn)富豪眼中,這不過(guò)是賬戶余額中的一點(diǎn)零錢(qián)。不過(guò)無(wú)論采用哪種視角,要想達(dá)到三十年前的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力,我們手里持有的美元現(xiàn)金都要翻倍才行。
根據(jù)美國(guó)勞工統(tǒng)計(jì)局(Bureau of Labor Statistics)數(shù)據(jù)測(cè)算,1995年100萬(wàn)美元凈資產(chǎn)的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力與2025年約210萬(wàn)美元的購(gòu)買(mǎi)力相當(dāng)。
過(guò)時(shí)的夢(mèng)想
對(duì)某些人而言,7位數(shù)的凈資產(chǎn),已成為與6位數(shù)年薪同樣過(guò)時(shí)的目標(biāo)。盡管如此,“百萬(wàn)富翁”這個(gè)稱(chēng)謂仍充斥在從政治到流行音樂(lè)的各個(gè)領(lǐng)域,成為財(cái)富的代名詞。
“這個(gè)數(shù)字確實(shí)好看,但在財(cái)富積累的漫長(zhǎng)征途中不過(guò)是個(gè)微不足道的節(jié)點(diǎn)”,41歲的丹·尤登說(shuō),這位來(lái)自羅德島州普羅維登斯的信息技術(shù)從業(yè)者,上月剛跨過(guò)百萬(wàn)美元的財(cái)富門(mén)檻,“不過(guò)跨過(guò)這個(gè)門(mén)檻后你肯定能稍微松口氣。”
根據(jù)瑞銀集團(tuán)的研究,美國(guó)的百萬(wàn)富翁絕對(duì)數(shù)量在全球遙遙領(lǐng)先,但若以人口比例衡量,瑞士和盧森堡的百萬(wàn)富翁密度更高。
印第安納大學(xué)凱利商學(xué)院金融學(xué)教授肯尼思·卡羅指出,當(dāng)代百萬(wàn)富翁群體呈現(xiàn)出三大共性特征:絕大多數(shù)持有股票與房產(chǎn),生活普遍恪守量入為出原則,且尤為重視教育傳承與子女理財(cái)責(zé)任培養(yǎng)。
卡羅說(shuō):“成為百萬(wàn)富翁的夢(mèng)想正變得越來(lái)越觸手可及。”
吉姆?王現(xiàn)年45歲,來(lái)自馬里蘭州富爾頓,曾為軟件工程師,現(xiàn)轉(zhuǎn)行金融博主,在談及自己的財(cái)富觀時(shí),他說(shuō),即便達(dá)到百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)對(duì)他和妻子而言不算什么大事,但作為曾在冬季的寒夜里靠關(guān)暖氣省錢(qián)的移民后代,這一成就仍頗具分量。
雖然少時(shí)憧憬的私人飛機(jī)未在資產(chǎn)越過(guò)百萬(wàn)門(mén)檻時(shí)如期而至,但這筆財(cái)富仍給他帶來(lái)了一定程度的安全感。
“即使做著普通工作,也完全有可能坐擁百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)”, 他篤定道,“只需做到勤勉不懈、持之以恒即可。”
FIRE運(yùn)動(dòng)
受益于穩(wěn)健的金融市場(chǎng),以及覆蓋廣泛、費(fèi)率低廉、投資方便的指數(shù)基金,許多人在既無(wú)巨額薪酬、也未繼承家產(chǎn)的情況下迅速完成財(cái)富積累,成功躋身百萬(wàn)富翁行列。
其中就包括在FIRE(Financial Independence Retire Early,簡(jiǎn)稱(chēng)FIRE,意為“財(cái)務(wù)獨(dú)立、提早退休”)運(yùn)動(dòng)中崛起的年輕百萬(wàn)富翁群體。
48歲的杰森·布雷克來(lái)自印第安納州費(fèi)希爾市,作為FIRE運(yùn)動(dòng)的忠實(shí)擁躉,其在九年前進(jìn)入“百萬(wàn)美元”俱樂(lè)部。達(dá)成這一目標(biāo)后,他立即辭去了自己的汽車(chē)營(yíng)銷(xiāo)工作,辭職前他的年薪只有約6萬(wàn)美元,卻設(shè)法存下了自己70%的收入。
現(xiàn)在,布雷克與妻子每年都會(huì)花數(shù)月時(shí)間四處旅行。盡管已經(jīng)退休,他們?nèi)酝ㄟ^(guò)嚴(yán)格預(yù)算持續(xù)擴(kuò)大自己的財(cái)富,身處美國(guó)本土?xí)r,他們會(huì)將月支出嚴(yán)格控制在1500美元以內(nèi),旅行期間也僅會(huì)增加數(shù)百美元消費(fèi)。
實(shí)現(xiàn)財(cái)富目標(biāo)后,二人依然過(guò)著簡(jiǎn)樸的生活,沒(méi)有雇傭家政打理草坪,沒(méi)有開(kāi)通網(wǎng)飛或亞馬遜視頻會(huì)員,也不使用外賣(mài)服務(wù)。他們會(huì)在出行時(shí)選擇經(jīng)濟(jì)艙,座駕仍是2005年的豐田轎車(chē)。
“百萬(wàn)資產(chǎn)已不再是通往奢華生活的金鑰匙”,布雷克說(shuō),“其給我們帶來(lái)的是自由與內(nèi)心的平靜。我們雖然買(mǎi)不起游艇,卻獲得了寶貴的時(shí)間自由。”(財(cái)富中文網(wǎng))
譯者:梁宇
審校:夏林
As a child, Heidi Barley watched her family pay for groceries with food stamps. As a college student, she dropped out because she couldn’t afford tuition. In her twenties, already scraping by, she was forced to take a pay cut that shrunk her salary to just $34,000 a year. But this summer, the 41-year-old hit a milestone that long felt out of reach: She became a millionaire.
A surging number of everyday Americans now boast a seven-figure net worth once the domain of celebrities and CEOs. But as the ranks of millionaires grow fatter, the significance of the status is shifting alongside perceptions of what it takes to be truly rich.
“Millionaire used to sound like Rich Uncle Pennybags in a top hat,” says Michael Ashley Schulman, chief investment officer at Running Point Capital Advisors, a wealth management firm in El Segundo, California. “It’s no longer a backstage pass to palatial estates and caviar bumps. It’s the new mass-affluent middleweight class, financially secure but two zeros short of private-jet territory.”
Inflation, ballooning home values and a decades-long push into stock markets by average investors have lifted millions into millionairehood. A June report from Swiss bank UBS found about one-tenth of American adults are members of the seven-digit club, with 1,000 freshly minted millionaires added daily last year.
According to the 2025 UBS Global Wealth Report, people considered “Everyday Millionaires,” or EMILLIs, have surged since the year 2000. The Great Wealth Transfer and soaring home prices are cited as factors driving the trend.
Inequality gap widens
Thirty years ago, the IRS counted 1.6 million Americans with a net worth of $1 million or more. UBS — using data from the United Nations, World Bank, International Monetary Fund and central banks of countries around the globe — put the number at 23.8 million in the U.S. last year, a nearly 15-fold increase.
The expanding ranks of millionaires come as the gulf between rich and poor widens. The richest 10% of Americans hold two-thirds of household wealth, according to the Federal Reserve, averaging $8.1 million each. The bottom 50% hold 3% of wealth, with an average of just $60,000 to their names.
Federal Reserve data also shows there are differences by race. Asian people outpace white people in the U.S. in median wealth, while Black and Hispanic people trail in their net worth.
‘Not as glamorous as the ideas in your head’
Barley was working as a journalist when her newspaper ended its pension program and she got a lump-sum payout of about $5,000. A colleague convinced her to invest it in a retirement account, and ever since, she’s stashed away whatever she could. The investments dipped at first during the Great Recession but eventually started growing. In time, she came to find catharsis in amassing savings, going home and checking her account balances when she had a tough day at work.
Last month, after one such day, she realized the moment had come.
“Did you know that we’re millionaires?” she asked her husband.
“Good job, honey,” Barley says he replied, unfazed.
It brought no immediate change. Like many millionaires, much of her wealth is in long-term investments and her home, not easy-to-access cash. She still lives in her modest Orlando, Florida, house, socks away half her paycheck, fills the napkin holder with takeout napkins and lines trash cans with grocery bags.
Still, Barley says it feels powerful to cross a threshold she never imagined reaching as a child.
“But it’s not as glamorous as the ideas in your head,” she says.
All wealth is relative. To thousandaires, $1 million is the stuff of dreams. To billionaires, it’s a rounding error. Either way, it takes twice as much cash today to match the buying power of 30 years ago.
A net worth of $1 million in 1995 is equivalent to about $2.1 million today, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.
An outdated dream
A seven-figure net worth is, to some, as outdated a yardstick as a six-figure salary. Nonetheless, “millionaire” is peppered in everything from politics to popular music as shorthand for rich.
“It’s a nice round number but it’s a point in a longer journey,” says Dan Uden, a 41-year-old from Providence, Rhode Island, who works in information technology and who hit the million-dollar mark last month. “It definitely gives you some room to breathe.”
No other country comes close to the U.S. in the sheer number of millionaires, though relative to population, UBS found Switzerland and Luxembourg had higher rates.
Kenneth Carow, a finance professor at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business, says commonalities emerge among today’s millionaires. The vast majority own stocks and a home. Most live below their means. They value education and teach financial responsibility to their children.
“The dream of becoming a millionaire,” Carow says, “has become more obtainable.”
Jim Wang, 45, a software engineer-turned finance blogger from Fulton, Maryland, says even if hitting $1 million was essentially “a non-event” for him and his wife, it still held weight for him as the son of immigrants who saved money by turning the heat off on winter nights.
The private jets he envisioned as a kid may not have materialized at the million-dollar threshold, but he still sees it as a marker that brings a certain level of security.
“It’s possible, even with a regular job,” he says. “You just have to be diligent and consistent.”
The FIRE movement
The resilience of financial markets and the ease of investing in broad-based, low-fee index funds has fueled the balances of many millionaires who don’t earn massive salaries or inherit family fortunes.
Among them is a burgeoning community of younger millionaires born out of the movement known as FIRE, for Financial Independence Retire Early.
Jason Breck, 48, of Fishers, Indiana, embraced FIRE and reached the million-dollar mark nine years ago. He promptly quit his job in automotive marketing, where he generally earned around $60,000 a year but managed to stow away around 70% of his pay.
Now, Breck and his wife spend several months a year traveling. Despite being retired, they continue to grow their balance by sticking to a tight budget and keeping expenses to $1,500 a month when they’re in the U.S and a few hundred dollars more when they travel.
Hitting their goal hasn’t translated to luxury. There is no lawn crew to cut the grass, no Netflix or Amazon Prime, no Uber Eats. They fly economy. They drive a 2005 Toyota.
“It’s not a golden ticket like it was in the past,” Breck says. “For us, a million dollars buys us freedom and peace of mind. We’re not yacht rich, but for us, we’re time rich.”