Are you a Gen Zer paying your own rent for the first time? A millennial buying more groceries than ever after having a second kid? A boomer getting set to enjoy the finer things in retirement?
Our quiz can show you if your spending looks like that of your peers, or if your wallet belongs to another generation.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes consumer expenditure data that indicates how much Americans spend on everything from housing to cellphones.
We turned to AI to create a quiz using several spending categories from the BLS, allowing users to learn who they really spend like. Is someone born in 1990 spending like a "Classic Millennial" or more considered to have "Boomer Tendencies"? How about someone born in 1975: Are they "Fiscally Youthful" because they spend more like Gen Z than Gen X?
Put in your best guess for how much you spend on housing, pets, entertainment, and more in the quiz below, and the results will show you how you stack up to averages for each generation. See more about our methodology here, and read on below the quiz to learn more about how generations spend their money.
Based on the Bureau of Labor Statistics data, Gen Xers had the highest average pre-tax income and average expenditures in 2024, followed by millennials. Like their older peers who are aging in place, a high share of Gen Xers are homeowners. The various generations are in different life stages, so it makes sense they have different average incomes and spending; Many Gen Zers are getting their careers off the ground, and many boomers are kicking off their retirement years amid the "silver tsunami."
"Unlike Millennials who are still building wealth, or Baby Boomers who may be scaling back in retirement, Gen Xers are in their peak earning years," Empower, a financial services company, wrote.
Shelter, including rent, mortgage payments, maintenance, and other costs, accounts for a large share of spending relative to other categories, regardless of generation. Gen X spends the most at $19,048 a year. Gen Z spends an average of $2,697 on utilities, fuels, and public services, about half of what Gen X spends, at $5,641.
The BLS data suggests Gen Zers are saving less of their income than most of their older peers. Other data shows how their debt looks. Experian data from June 2025 showed 72.2% of Gen Zers had credit card balances, less than the 82.9% for both boomers and the Silent generation. Just 7.6% of Gen Zers had mortgage debt, while 53.6% of Gen Xers and 57% of boomers had the same thing.
"Much has been written about millennials being shut out of homeownership, with only 37% of millennial consumers currently paying down a mortgage—a smaller share than older generations. But those payments are often higher than what more seasoned homeowners are paying," Experian said. The National Association of REALTORS found the median age of first-time buyers has inched up to 40 years old.
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Madison Hoff is a reporter on Business Insider’s economy team. She covers the labor market, inflation, spending, and other data. In addition to covering new estimates and trends, her workforce reporting includes career pivots, job searching, and side hustles.She also covers downsizing, particularly people selling their houses to pursue RV living. She has also reported on how much teachers spend out of pocket and what it’s like being a caregiver.Her stories often cover the state of the economy, what experts are saying, and how people are navigating the workplace or their careers.Previously, she was a junior reporter and data editorial fellow on the Strategy team.A few of her stories:
- Job-market trend: Welcome to the 'Great Freeze': Why companies aren't firing, workers can't grow, and the unemployed can't get jobs
- Job-market trend: Everyone's focused on AI — but it's aging Americans who are quietly rewiring the job market
- Career pivot: I retired early from my federal job and took a part-time job at TJ Maxx. I'm happier and less stressed.
- Downsizing/RV living: An empty-nester couple who traded in a $400K house for an $80K RV explain their favorite parts of retirement on the road
- Job searching: People who haven't had steady work for at least a year are networking, doing temporary jobs, and soul-searching
- Side hustles: A millennial who used side hustles to pay off debt explains the lucrative and easy ones she recommends
- Teacher spending: A teacher who spent more than $5,000 of her own money to make a cozy classroom explains why it helps kids learn
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