Monday, March 16, 2026

Money Matters - Study: An Average American Spends up to 3 Months a Year Earning Enough Just for Rent, Groceries, and Saving For a Used Car

 Americans are sacrificing weeks of their lives each year just to stand still financially, according to new analysis from InvestorsObserver.

 

Despite strong wage growth since 2007, rising costs for rent, groceries, and used cars now force many workers to spend up to three months of the year covering only the basics.

 

Americans Working Longer Just to Afford the Basics

 

Nearly 20 years after the 2008 financial crisis, hourly wages are up 65.6% nationwide, rising from an average of 20.75 dollars in 2007 to roughly 34.35 dollars in 2025.

 

Yet essential costs have far outpaced paychecks, leaving Americans trading more of their time for the same standard of living their parents could once afford.

 

Today, the average American works 66 full days a year just to cover rent, groceries, and save for a used car. Compared to 2007, that’s seven extra eighth-hour workdays a year simply to maintain basic living standards, or roughly one additional work hour every week lost to inflation-driven costs.

 

“It’s the extra hour you’re working every single week just to stand still. Families are giving up vacations, weekends, and time with their kids so they can keep a roof overhead, put food on the table, and slowly save for a used car. When a third of the year is spent just earning the basics, the American dream stops being about getting ahead and starts being about trying not to fall behind,” said Sam Borugi, senior analyst at InvestorsObserver.

 

States Where Time Is Being Stolen the Fastest

 

The research shows the crunch is particularly severe in coastal and high-demand states, where housing costs have exploded.

 

In the ten hardest-hit states, workers now spend an average of 15.6 extra days every year paying for the same rent, groceries, and saving for a used car as in 2007, adding up to about 2.5 lost years of labor over a 40-year career.

 

Delaware tops the list with 25.4 additional workdays a year required to afford these three essentials, equivalent to more than five full work weeks of extra effort.

 

Maryland (18.5 days), New York (18.4 days), New Jersey (16.2 days), and California (15.8 days) round out the top five states demanding the biggest extra time sacrifice from workers.

 

Housing alone accounts for most of the added burden in many of these regions. Delaware residents now spend 18.2 extra workdays a year just to cover rent, while workers in Maryland, California, New York, and New Jersey each face more than 12 additional rent-focused days compared with 2007.

 

Even in high-wage states like Massachusetts and Washington, workers must now clock more days annually before they can spend on anything beyond basic survival.

 

Where the Grind Is Longest

 

In some states, the sheer amount of time needed each year to cover the basics is significant, even when the increase since 2007 is smaller.

 

Hawaii is now the most time-expensive state in America, with workers needing 86.6 full 8-hour days every year just to pay for annual rent on a one-bedroom apartment, a year of groceries, and savings toward a used car.

 

“Asking people to spend nearly three months of their year just to keep a modest roof over their heads and save for a used car isn’t a lifestyle choice. When even places that haven’t seen the biggest jumps still demand this much time for the basics, it shows how the cost-of-living crisis is eating away not just at wallets, but at people’s time, energy, and sense of security,” said Bourgi.

 

New Jersey follows at 83.6 days, with Maryland at 80.9 days and Delaware at 80.3 days devoted solely to these three categories before a dollar can go to health care, debt, or discretionary spending.

 

States like Massachusetts, Rhode Island, California, Florida, Nevada, and Connecticut all demand more than 70 workdays per year just to clear the same basic threshold.

 

America’s Rare Bright Spots

 

Only a handful of states have managed to give workers any time back. Idaho shows the biggest improvement, with residents now needing 4.9 fewer days each year to cover rent, groceries, and saving for a used car than they did in 2007, including 2.7 days saved on rent alone.

 

Arkansas workers save 3.8 days a year across the three essentials, almost all of it driven by lower relative time needed for rent, while South Dakota has clawed back a modest 0.2 days overall.

 

These small gains, however, are overshadowed by rising grocery and vehicle costs that continue to erode household budgets nationwide.

 

A Warning Sign of Deepening Strain

 

InvestorsObserver’s analysis compares 2007 and 2025 using federal and industry data on hourly wages, fair market rents, used car prices, and a fixed grocery basket adjusted for inflation.

 

The findings arrive as surveys show a growing share of Americans living paycheck to paycheck and openly hoping for a housing correction to ease the pressure.

 

“With many workers now spending between a quarter and a third of their year just to afford rent, food, and a used car, more Americans are no longer trading time for progress – they are trading time for the bare minimum of existence,” concluded Bourgi.

 

ABOUT SAM BOURGI

Sam Bourgi is a finance analyst and researcher at InvestorsObserver, bringing over 13 years of expertise in financial markets, economics, and monetary policy. His professional background spans the private, nonprofit, and public sectors, where he has held positions such as senior policy adviser, labor market analyst, and marketing director. Sam’s in-depth research and market analysis have been referenced by leading institutions and organizations, including the U.S. Congress, Department of Justice, Chicago Board Options Exchange, Bank for International Settlements, Boston University Law Review, Barron’s, and Forbes. Sam regularly appears on TV, including Fox 5 DC (live), CBNKFYR TV11Alive, and ABC30, and is quoted by such media outlets as ReutersBloombergSF Chronicle and ZeroHedge.

 

ABOUT INVESTORS OBSERVER

InvestorsObserver is a trusted source of independent financial analysis, market insights, and investment research for individuals and institutions. Founded to empower retail investors with actionable intelligence, InvestorsObserver delivers timely commentary, data-driven studies, and accessible financial tools designed to simplify complex market trends. Its research and insights have been featured by various media outlets, including Yahoo, The GuardianMorning StarReutersNasdaq, and more.

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