High Earners Are Too Stressed to Check Their Bank Accounts — Even at $200,000 a Year

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
New research reveals that 42% of Americans earning $200,000 or more avoid looking at their bank balances due to financial stress. Half say they'd need double their current income to feel secure, as inflation and rising costs turn six-figure salaries from success stories into survival mode.

You know that silent prayer you say while waiting for the card reader to beep? That tight feeling in your chest, wondering if this one will go through? We tend to assume that anxiety belongs to people living paycheck to paycheck. Turns out, even people earning $200,000 a year are avoiding their banking apps for the exact same reason: the numbers on the screen don't feel reassuring. They feel stressful.

According to new research from The Harris Poll, 40% of six-figure earners admit they've avoided checking their account balance just to keep stress at bay. Among those pulling in $200,000 or more, that figure climbs to 42%. Nearly half of this group reports wrestling with financial anxiety, and most feel guilty even mentioning money troubles because they're painfully aware they earn more than the average American.

The Survey Behind the Stress

The "Income Paradox Survey" ran online across the U.S. from July 31 to August 2, capturing responses from 2,109 adults. That included 728 people earning at least $100,000 personally and 280 earning $200,000 or more, which places them roughly in the top 10% of individual earners nationwide. These aren't statistical outliers scraping by at the bottom of the six-figure range. These are high earners by any reasonable measure.

So why are they stressed? Because six figures doesn't mean what it used to. The survey found that 64% of six-figure earners agree their income represents "survival mode, not a sign of wealth." Meanwhile, 52% say the American Dream feels impossible even at this level. About one in three describe themselves as financially distressed, meaning they feel stretched thin, struggling, or actively drowning in their finances.

Where the Money Actually Goes

This isn't about frivolous spending or champagne taste. The money disappears into the same categories that squeeze everyone else, just with bigger price tags attached. When Harris asked what's draining income the fastest right now, six-figure earners pointed to groceries and household essentials first, at 36%. Rent or mortgage payments came next at 32%, followed by health insurance and medical costs at 31%. Rounding out the top five were unexpected emergencies and transportation costs, both hovering around 30%.

Once those basics are covered, there's not much left for the things that used to define comfortable middle-class life. More than half of six-figure earners say regular vacations, driving a new car, or dining out regularly now fall into a "pressure zone" where they either strain to afford it or skip it entirely to stay financially stable. It's a quiet recalibration of expectations.

The Credit Card Safety Net

To make ends meet, many high earners are turning to strategies once associated with people earning far less. Three-quarters of six-figure earners have put everyday bills on a credit card in the past three months because they ran out of cash, not because they were chasing rewards points. Among those earning $200,000 or more, that figure jumps to 80%. Nearly half of the $200,000 group say they depend on credit cards just to make ends meet, and 45% report that buy now, pay later services have become a regular part of their spending habits.

The workarounds don't stop there. Among six-figure earners, 61% are either already working a side hustle or planning to start one. Sizable shares report selling personal items, cutting back on medical care, or even skipping meals to keep up with expenses. In the same survey, 62% say it feels nearly impossible to keep up on one income alone.

Inflation's Long Shadow

Rising prices haven't helped. Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows consumer prices have climbed roughly 23% since 2019. That means a paycheck that once funded a comfortable lifestyle now has to stretch much farther just to maintain the status quo. For households where costs are concentrated in housing, healthcare, childcare, and debt repayment, those inflation years are still echoing loudly.

How Much Is Enough?

So here's the real question: how much would it actually take for these high earners to feel secure instead of stressed every time they check their balance?

Harris asked directly. Half of six-figure earners say a household needs at least $200,000 a year to feel comfortably middle class where they live. Among those already earning $200,000 or more, 75% agree. Even more striking, 53% of six-figure earners say they wouldn't feel financially secure unless they earned double what they make now. That sentiment is shared by 53% of the $200,000 group and 55% of all Americans surveyed.

In other words, plenty of people already earning $200,000 think they'd only breathe easy somewhere closer to $400,000. Six-figure salaries were once considered the finish line, the marker of having made it. In this survey, they look more like mile markers on a moving track, where even the people near the front are still glancing nervously over their shoulders, hoping the next notification isn't another bill.

What Can Actually Help

For anyone caught in that cycle, working with a financial advisor can take some of the drama out of those numbers. A good advisor can help high earners figure out where the money is actually going, build a realistic plan for debt, saving, and investing, and pressure-test what "secure" really looks like for their specific household. It won't fix rising prices or magically rewrite a paycheck, but it can turn vague dread into a clearer roadmap, which is often the first step toward feeling less anxious every time the banking app lights up.

High Earners Are Too Stressed to Check Their Bank Accounts — Even at $200,000 a Year

MarketDash Editorial Team
14 days ago
New research reveals that 42% of Americans earning $200,000 or more avoid looking at their bank balances due to financial stress. Half say they'd need double their current income to feel secure, as inflation and rising costs turn six-figure salaries from success stories into survival mode.

You know that silent prayer you say while waiting for the card reader to beep? That tight feeling in your chest, wondering if this one will go through? We tend to assume that anxiety belongs to people living paycheck to paycheck. Turns out, even people earning $200,000 a year are avoiding their banking apps for the exact same reason: the numbers on the screen don't feel reassuring. They feel stressful.

According to new research from The Harris Poll, 40% of six-figure earners admit they've avoided checking their account balance just to keep stress at bay. Among those pulling in $200,000 or more, that figure climbs to 42%. Nearly half of this group reports wrestling with financial anxiety, and most feel guilty even mentioning money troubles because they're painfully aware they earn more than the average American.

The Survey Behind the Stress

The "Income Paradox Survey" ran online across the U.S. from July 31 to August 2, capturing responses from 2,109 adults. That included 728 people earning at least $100,000 personally and 280 earning $200,000 or more, which places them roughly in the top 10% of individual earners nationwide. These aren't statistical outliers scraping by at the bottom of the six-figure range. These are high earners by any reasonable measure.

So why are they stressed? Because six figures doesn't mean what it used to. The survey found that 64% of six-figure earners agree their income represents "survival mode, not a sign of wealth." Meanwhile, 52% say the American Dream feels impossible even at this level. About one in three describe themselves as financially distressed, meaning they feel stretched thin, struggling, or actively drowning in their finances.

Where the Money Actually Goes

This isn't about frivolous spending or champagne taste. The money disappears into the same categories that squeeze everyone else, just with bigger price tags attached. When Harris asked what's draining income the fastest right now, six-figure earners pointed to groceries and household essentials first, at 36%. Rent or mortgage payments came next at 32%, followed by health insurance and medical costs at 31%. Rounding out the top five were unexpected emergencies and transportation costs, both hovering around 30%.

Once those basics are covered, there's not much left for the things that used to define comfortable middle-class life. More than half of six-figure earners say regular vacations, driving a new car, or dining out regularly now fall into a "pressure zone" where they either strain to afford it or skip it entirely to stay financially stable. It's a quiet recalibration of expectations.

The Credit Card Safety Net

To make ends meet, many high earners are turning to strategies once associated with people earning far less. Three-quarters of six-figure earners have put everyday bills on a credit card in the past three months because they ran out of cash, not because they were chasing rewards points. Among those earning $200,000 or more, that figure jumps to 80%. Nearly half of the $200,000 group say they depend on credit cards just to make ends meet, and 45% report that buy now, pay later services have become a regular part of their spending habits.

The workarounds don't stop there. Among six-figure earners, 61% are either already working a side hustle or planning to start one. Sizable shares report selling personal items, cutting back on medical care, or even skipping meals to keep up with expenses. In the same survey, 62% say it feels nearly impossible to keep up on one income alone.

Inflation's Long Shadow

Rising prices haven't helped. Bureau of Labor Statistics data shows consumer prices have climbed roughly 23% since 2019. That means a paycheck that once funded a comfortable lifestyle now has to stretch much farther just to maintain the status quo. For households where costs are concentrated in housing, healthcare, childcare, and debt repayment, those inflation years are still echoing loudly.

How Much Is Enough?

So here's the real question: how much would it actually take for these high earners to feel secure instead of stressed every time they check their balance?

Harris asked directly. Half of six-figure earners say a household needs at least $200,000 a year to feel comfortably middle class where they live. Among those already earning $200,000 or more, 75% agree. Even more striking, 53% of six-figure earners say they wouldn't feel financially secure unless they earned double what they make now. That sentiment is shared by 53% of the $200,000 group and 55% of all Americans surveyed.

In other words, plenty of people already earning $200,000 think they'd only breathe easy somewhere closer to $400,000. Six-figure salaries were once considered the finish line, the marker of having made it. In this survey, they look more like mile markers on a moving track, where even the people near the front are still glancing nervously over their shoulders, hoping the next notification isn't another bill.

What Can Actually Help

For anyone caught in that cycle, working with a financial advisor can take some of the drama out of those numbers. A good advisor can help high earners figure out where the money is actually going, build a realistic plan for debt, saving, and investing, and pressure-test what "secure" really looks like for their specific household. It won't fix rising prices or magically rewrite a paycheck, but it can turn vague dread into a clearer roadmap, which is often the first step toward feeling less anxious every time the banking app lights up.