Millennials Are Helping America Save More Money

Young workers prepare for a rainy day while Generation X and Baby Boomers struggle to rebuild their bank accounts.
Millennials, Don't Worry. You'll Be Able to Retire.
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After almost a decade, Americans may finally be turning the corner on saving money. More than 30 percent of them say they have enough tucked away to cover six months’ worth of expenses—a seven-year high for this measure of financial calamity preparedness, a financial planning favorite.

Meanwhile, the percentage who concede in an annual survey that they have no savings fell to a six-year low of 24 percent, down from 28 percent last year.

“Ever since the recession, we’ve noticed in surveys that people realize how important it is to have emergency savings, but for so many years post-recession they just weren’t making any progress,” said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.com, which released the survey on Tuesday. Now a broader swath of people are finally making headway, he said.

The poll of 1,003 Americans, conducted by Princeton Survey Research Associates International, showed impressive savings habits among millennials, particularly younger ones, McBride said. Thirty-one percent of Americans age 18-26 have enough saved to cover three to five months’ worth of expenses. (Some, however, are likely living at home or with roommates—or counting their trust funds.)