30 December 2024

US credit card defaults jump to highest level since 2010

Go get the actual data. 

Here’s the quarterly report from the Fed. 



Center for Microeconomic Data


Press Release

Household Debt Rose Modestly; Delinquency Rates Remain Elevated

November 13, 2024

NEW YORK—The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data today issued its Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. The report shows total household debt increased by $147 billion (0.8%) in Q3 2024, to $17.94 trillion. The report is based on data from the New York Fed’s nationally representative Consumer Credit Panel. It includes a one-page summary of key takeaways and their supporting data points.

The New York Fed also issued an accompanying Liberty Street Economics blog post examining the evolution in aggregate debt to income ratios and what that suggests about Americans’ ability to manage their debt obligations.

“Although household balances continue to rise in nominal terms, growth in income has outpaced debt,” said Donghoon Lee, Economic Research Advisor at the New York Fed. 
“Still, elevated delinquency rates reveal stress for many households, even amid some moderation in delinquency trends this quarter.”
  • Mortgage balances increased by $75 billion from the previous quarter and reached $12.59 trillion at the end of September. 
  • HELOC balances increased by $7 billion, representing the tenth consecutive quarterly increase since Q1 2022, and stood at $387 billion. 
  • Credit card balances increased by $24 billion to $1.17 trillion. 
  • Auto loan balances saw a $18 billion increase and stood at $1.64 trillion. 
  • Other balances, which include retail cards and other consumer loans, were effectively flat, with a $2 billion increase. 
  • Student loan balances grew by $21 billion, and now stand at $1.61 trillion.
The pace of mortgage originations increased slightly from the pace observed in the previous four quarters, with $448 billion of newly originated mortgages in Q3. 
Aggregate limits on credit card accounts increased modestly by $63 billion, representing a 1.3% increase from the previous quarter. 
Limits on HELOC increased by $9 billion, the tenth consecutive quarterly increase.

Aggregate delinquency rates edged up from the previous quarter, with 3.5% of outstanding debt in some stage of delinquency. 
  • Delinquency transition rates were mixed. 
  • Credit card delinquency rates improved, with 8.8% of balances transitioning to delinquency compared to 9.1% in the previous quarter.  
  • Early delinquency transitions for auto loans and mortgages worsened slightly, rising by 0.2 and 0.3 percentage points respectively. 
  • About 126,000 consumers had a bankruptcy notation added to their credit reports this quarter, a small decline from the previous quarter.

Household Debt and Credit Developments as of Q3 2024

CategoryQuarterly Change * (Billions $)Annual Change** (Billions $)Total As of Q3 2024 (Trillions $)
Mortgage Debt(+) $75(+) $580$12.594
Home Equity Line of Credit(+) $7(+) $38$0.387
Student Debt(+) $21(+) $7$1.606       
Auto Debt(+) $18(+) $49$1.644
Credit Card Debt(+) $24(+) $87$1.166
Other(+) $2(+) 17$0.546
Total Debt(+) $147(+) $778$17.943

*Change from Q2 2024 to Q3 2024
** Change from Q3 2023 to Q3 2024

Flow into Serious Delinquency (90 days or more delinquent)

Category1Q3 2023Q3 2024
Mortgage Debt0.72%1.08%
Home Equity Line of Credit0.41%0.43%
Student Loan Debt0.77%0.77%
Auto Loan Debt2.53%2.90%
Credit Card Debt5.78%7.10%
Other4.96%5.50%
ALL1.28%1.68%


About the Report

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Household Debt and Credit Report provides unique data and insight into the credit conditions and activity of U.S. consumers. Based on data from the New York Fed’s Consumer Credit Panel, a nationally representative sample drawn from anonymized Equifax credit data, the report provides a quarterly snapshot of household trends in borrowing and indebtedness, including data about mortgages, student loans, credit cards, auto loans, and delinquencies. The report aims to help community groups, small businesses, state and local governments, and the public to better understand, monitor, and respond to trends in borrowing and indebtedness at the household level. Sections of the report are presented as interactive graphs on the New York Fed’s Household Debt and Credit Report webpage and the full report is available for download.


1 Rates represent annualized shares of balances transitioning into delinquency. Flow into serious delinquency is computed as the balances that have newly become at least 90 days late in the reference quarter divided by the balances that were current or less than 90 days past due in the previous quarter.


Top stories


HOUSEHOLD DEBT AND CREDIT REPORT (Q3 2024)
Household Debt Ticks Up to $17.94 Trillion; Delinquency Rates Remain Elevated  
Total household debt increased by $147 billion to reach $17.94 trillion, according to the latest Quarterly Report on Household Debt and Credit. Aggregate delinquency rates edged up from the previous quarter, with 3.5 percent of outstanding debt in some stage of delinquency. Mortgage balances rose by $75 billion from the previous quarter to reach $12.59 trillion at the end of September. While growth in income has outpaced debt, elevated balance levels continue to reveal stress for many households. Credit card balances increased by $24 billion to hit $1.17 trillion, and auto loan balances saw an $18 billion increase and stood at $1.64 trillion. HELOC balances increased by $7 billion to reach $387 billion, representing the tenth consecutive quarterly increase since Q1 2022.

For more details:
Report: Q3 2024
Blog: Income Growth Outpaces Household Borrowing
Press Release: Household Debt Rose Modestly; Delinquency Rates Remain Elevated

Total Debt BalancetrillionNon-housing debtHousing debt2004:Q12005:Q12006:Q12007:Q12008:Q12009:Q12010:Q12011:Q12012:Q12013:Q12014:Q12015:Q12016:Q12017:Q12018:Q12019:Q12020:Q12021:Q12022:Q12023:Q12024:Q1$0.0$2.0$4.0$6.0$8.0$10.0$12.0$14.0$16.0$18.0Source: FRBNY Consumer Credit Panel/Equifax

  • Mortgage balances shown on consumer credit reports grew by $75 billion during the third quarter of 2024 and totaled $12.59 trillion at the end of September. Balances on home equity lines of credit (HELOC) rose by $7 billion, the tenth consecutive quarterly increase after 2022Q1, and there is now $387 billion in aggregate outstanding balances, $70 billion above the series low reached in the third quarter of 2021. Credit card balances, which now total $1.17 trillion outstanding, grew by $24 billion during the third quarter and are 8.1% above the level a year ago. Auto loan balances rose by $18 billion, and now stand at $1.64 trillion. Other balances, which include retail cards and other consumer loans, remained effectively flat, with a $2 billion increase. Student loan balances grew by $21 billion, and now stand at $1.61 trillion. In total, non-housing balances grew by $65 billion, a 1.3% rise from 2024Q2.

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