How consumers are using their credit cards suggests elevated financial stress

How consumers are using their credit cards suggests elevated financial stress
New report shows rising levels of delinquencies.
JAN 29, 2025

American consumers are showing signs of financial stress in the way they are using their credit cards, according to a new report which highlights a concerning rise in the delinquency rate.

While credit card balances in December were up 2.9% year-over-year, the highest rise in a year, this can be mostly attributed to a corresponding rise in inflation for 2024. Adjusted-for-inflation balances were flat and the average balance was $6,583 compared to $6,398 in December 2023.

VantageScore’s CreditGauge report, which analyzes the health of US consumer credit, shows that the average VantageScore 4.0 score was unchanged at 702, while the scores ranged from 300 to 850.

"Consumer spending offers a mixed picture as we enter 2025," said Susan Fahy, executive vice president and chief digital officer at VantageScore. "Though consumers continued to spend in 2024, it was largely in line with the inflation rate, indicating they entered the new year leveraging their credit mostly for necessities.”

Cautious consumers mean that overall consumer credit utilization dropped one full percentage point to 51.6%, the second-lowest credit utilization rate in 2024. Overall credit balances fell 0.9% or $952 in December 2024 compared to the month before, driven by homeowners paying down mortgage debt while new home sales were constrained.

However, with economic challenges including interest rates, the cost of living and a softer labor market, delinquencies rose to near their highest over the past five years with increased year-over-year delinquencies across all VantageScore credit tiers except VantageScore Superprime (781-850).

“Delinquencies remain a concern as they sit near the highest levels since just before the pandemic and continued to worsen among the riskiest credit tiers, a sign that consumers are still feeling strained and are spending in moderation," added Fahy.

Latest News

Costly referral programs fuel RIA M&A growth strategies
Costly referral programs fuel RIA M&A growth strategies

With growth topping succession as the leading M&A driver, referral programs are a top of mind consideration for advisory firms making moves as Goldman Sachs, Pershing and Robinhood consider entering the referral market.

Dynasty firm Procyon Partners inks staking deal with Constellation Wealth Capital
Dynasty firm Procyon Partners inks staking deal with Constellation Wealth Capital

The $8 billion RIA is getting more fuel for geographic expansion and recruit top talent through a minority investment partnership.

Dual-share class hopes grow higher with filings from Pimco, T. Rowe Price
Dual-share class hopes grow higher with filings from Pimco, T. Rowe Price

The rush of SEC applications, which also includes JPMorgan and Schwab, reflect growing optimism over the tax-busting fund structure.

Concurrent hails first quarter advisor team growth, adding $2B in AUM
Concurrent hails first quarter advisor team growth, adding $2B in AUM

The half-dozen teams who joined the hybrid RIA in the early innings of 2025 have lifted it past a key asset milestone.

Judge Oks release of $400 million to besieged GPB investors.
Judge Oks release of $400 million to besieged GPB investors.

Meanwhile, GPB senior executives' sentencing for fraud pushed to May.

SPONSORED Compliance in real time: Technology's expanding role in RIA oversight

RIAs face rising regulatory pressure in 2025. Forward-looking firms are responding with embedded technology, not more paperwork.

SPONSORED Advisory firms confront crossroads amid historic wealth transfer

As inheritances are set to reshape client portfolios and next-gen heirs demand digital-first experiences, firms are retooling their wealth tech stacks and succession models in real time.