The new year is supposed to feel like a fresh start, right? Clean slate, new goals, all that. But for a lot of Americans, 2026 isn't arriving with optimism. It's arriving with dread. And that's true even after a year when the stock market kept hitting new records.
Here's the thing: according to a recent Allianz Life survey, nearly half of Americans (48%) say they're more stressed now than they were this time last year. That's up 5% from the previous year. So instead of easing up, financial anxiety is actually intensifying as we flip the calendar.
The culprits are pretty familiar. Higher costs for basics like groceries and housing. Wages that aren't keeping pace. Emergency funds that are more like emergency puddles. Debt that keeps growing. Healthcare bills that never seem to stop. And on top of all that, rising concerns about whether your job will still be there next month.
For financial advisors, the real concern isn't just that people are stressed. It's that stress is changing how they behave, particularly when it comes to retirement planning. When your budget feels like it's constantly on fire, thinking about decades from now becomes a luxury you can't afford. Retirement savings? That gets bumped down the priority list fast.
The numbers back this up. The survey found that 27% of Americans have less confidence in their ability to hit retirement goals than they did a year ago. Gen X and Gen Z are feeling especially discouraged. Even more striking: more than 20% say they're actually further away from retirement now than they were last year. That's not just stagnation, it's backsliding.
This creates a vicious cycle. When clients feel overwhelmed, long-term planning starts to feel optional, or even unrealistic. They pause contributions. They skip check-ins. They tell themselves they'll get back to it when things calm down, except things never really calm down.
Job anxiety is adding fuel to the fire. More Americans plan to start job hunting next year: 56%, up from 47% last year. But here's the flip side: of those not looking for new work, 71% say they're staying put because it feels safer in this economy. Call it "job hugging."
The problem with job hugging? Sure, it protects short-term stability. But without a significant raise, you're likely looking at slower income growth while expenses keep climbing. That just reinforces the stress cycle.
There is some good news, though. Nearly half of survey respondents say they plan to make and keep a financial resolution this year, with younger generations leading the charge.
For advisors, this is the opening. You don't need to push clients toward dramatic overhauls when they're already stressed. What they need is reassurance that small, steady actions still count. Celebrate the incremental wins. Keep contributions going, even if they're modest. Help clarify priorities without piling on pressure. Progress doesn't have to be perfect to matter.




