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The Real Numbers: How Many Millionaires Are Actually in the US?
Becoming a millionaire might seem like an impossible dream for many Americans, but the reality tells a different story. Based on the most recent comprehensive survey data, the millionaire population in the US has grown substantially—and it’s worth understanding what this means for your own financial journey.
Understanding America’s Millionaire Population
According to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, which tracks household financial data every three years, approximately 18% of American households have a net worth of at least $1 million. To put that in perspective, that translates to roughly 23.7 million millionaire households across the country. What’s particularly striking is that this growth persists even after accounting for inflation. The percentage of millionaires climbed significantly between 2019 and 2022 alone, breaking a pattern of stagnation that had lasted nearly two decades prior.
The implications are clear: building seven-figure wealth in the US is more achievable today than many people realize. And with robust stock market performance and rising property values since 2022, the actual number of millionaires has likely expanded even further.
Where Does Millionaire Wealth Come From?
Before you wonder if you need to launch a startup to reach millionaire status, here’s an important reality check: most millionaires don’t get there through business ownership. Only about 17% of millionaires hold any equity in small businesses. For households with a net worth between $1 million and $3 million, that figure drops to just 11%.
Instead, the two pillars supporting millionaire wealth are far more straightforward:
Retirement Accounts: The average millionaire maintains approximately $810,000 across retirement savings vehicles—everything from IRAs and 401(k)s to Keogh plans and traditional pensions. Those in the $1-3 million range average around $450,000 in retirement funds. This reflects the power of consistent contributions and decades of compound growth.
Primary Residence and Home Equity: The second major wealth driver is home ownership. The typical millionaire holds roughly $743,000 in home equity, while those in the lower millionaire tier ($1-3 million net worth) average $503,000. Each mortgage payment functions as a forced savings mechanism, gradually building your stake in a tangible asset.
The Age and Income Profile of Millionaires
Wealth accumulation is fundamentally a function of time. The median age of a millionaire household in America is 62—a number that reflects decades of saving and investing. Here’s how millionaire status breaks down by age group:
Age Group: 18-29 | 30-39 | 40-49 | 50-59 | 60-69 | 70+ % of Millionaire Households: 1.05% | 5.28% | 15.33% | 24.82% | 27.51% | 25.86%
The data reveals a stark reality: households with members in their 50s or older account for roughly 77% of all millionaires. This isn’t coincidence—it’s the natural result of compound interest working over extended periods.
When it comes to income, the typical millionaire household earns $215,000 annually. For those with net worth between $1 million and $3 million, median household income stands at $164,000. While well above the national household median of $70,000, these figures aren’t unattainable, particularly for dual-income households in their 40s and 50s.
Building Your Path to Millionaire Status
The research points to a single dominant factor: sustained saving and strategic investing over many years. Millionaires typically began their wealth journey early, allowing compound earnings to multiply their contributions exponentially. Time, not luck, is the primary variable.
The pathway involves several consistent elements. Start investing young—even modest regular contributions grow dramatically when given 30 or 40 years to compound. Maximize retirement account contributions, which offer tax advantages and forced discipline. Direct a meaningful portion of earnings into diversified stock market investments. Advance your career strategically to increase income over time, and channel salary increases toward savings rather than lifestyle inflation.
Home ownership amplifies this strategy by turning monthly mortgage payments into equity growth. As long as property values keep pace with inflation, real estate becomes a vehicle for wealth multiplication through leverage.
The encouraging takeaway: you don’t need an extraordinary income or a brilliant business idea to become one of America’s millionaires. Ordinary earners who make deliberate financial choices—starting early, saving consistently, and investing wisely—reach millionaire status with remarkable regularity.