{"id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","title":"The Big Picture: Americans Are Swiping More - and Still Struggling","slug":"the-big-picture-americans-are-swiping-more-and-still-struggling","description":"The Big Picture: Americans Are Swiping More - and Still Struggling","status":"public","language":"en","readTime":7,"updatedAt":"2026-05-08T10:17:25.389749+00:00","createdAt":"2026-05-06T04:40:03.422214+00:00","author":{"id":"81babdeb-3dd5-4d48-a9cb-9fd29164a5ee","name":"Alleluia Gracia Van Cauwenberghe","job_title":"Personal and consumer finance contributor","deleted_at":null,"description":"Wia Van Cauwenberghe is a finance contributor specializing in debt management, consumer credit, and modern lending trends. Her work empowers everyday consumers to take control of their financial future with clarity and confidence.","socialLinks":[],"jobTitle":"Personal and consumer finance contributor","createdAt":"2026-02-10T12:13:36.913036+00:00","updatedAt":"2026-02-10T12:32:14.905609+00:00","image":{"id":"e09e6a3e-ada3-41cf-9b95-5261d92d6edb","url":"https://mausdpdlpkuortcoddxg.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/cms_images/media/1770726697143-7qedu2qdhbe.webp","filename":"media/1770726697143-7qedu2qdhbe.webp","alt":"Alleluia Gracia Van Cauwenberghe","mime_type":"image/webp","file_size":82980,"mimeType":"image/webp","fileSize":82980}},"ogImage":{"id":"69b02977-541f-4875-8fb8-1eded5462881","url":"https://mausdpdlpkuortcoddxg.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/cms_images/media/1778063487747-aw2gk3ttrmi.webp","filename":"media/1778063487747-aw2gk3ttrmi.webp","alt":"Young woman holding a credit card and shopping bag, smiling on a city street.","mime_type":"image/webp","file_size":50522,"mimeType":"image/webp","fileSize":50522},"blocks":[{"id":"265e43c7-254c-46cd-98a9-ecddacdf84bb","order":0,"content":"<p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>In the third quarter of 2025, Americans collectively carried an eye-watering $ 1.233 trillion in credit card balances. That’s the highest total the country has seen since modern tracking began – a sure sign that consumers are leaning heavily on plastic to get by.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>What makes this hard to ignore is not just the sheer size of the number, but what’s behind it: inflation, high costs, and a growing number of households using credit cards for basic needs. For many, credit cards are no longer a convenience; they're a lifeline.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>At the same time, delinquency - that is, payments overdue by 30, 60, or 90 days - has been rising again. For many borrowers, the burden is becoming too heavy. This trend is casting a shadow over what might otherwise be a healthy economy.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.893375+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.893375+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"a79ef7c7-17f2-44c5-8468-b7632f820aee","order":1,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><strong>From the pandemic drop to a debt surge</strong></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">To understand how we got here, it helps to look back a little. If you may remember, during the pandemic, many US households slashed their credit card balances - some by paying them off, others by reducing spending altogether. As a result, credit card debt dropped to unusually low levels by early 2021.&nbsp;</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">But that drop was short-lived. As pandemic relief faded, costs rose, and people returned to more “normal” spending - at the same time that many were hit by higher living expenses. The result: credit card balances began climbing again. Over four years, from the first quarter of 2021 all the way to the third quarter of 2025, balances shot up by a stunning $463 billion - a 60% increase in just four years!</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">By Q3 2025, the total was not only back to pre-pandemic levels - it had blown past them. The balance is $306 billion more than the previously held record in Q4 2019.&nbsp;</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">For many Americans, this isn’t an abstract number<em>. It means more households are carrying balances month-to-month and fewer are paying in full. </em>In 2023, fewer than half of adult credit card holders carried a balance for at least one month.</p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.927533+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.927533+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"9386b4b8-89c6-4bf9-a290-142bd51331b9","order":2,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><strong>Why so much credit card use? The pressure is very real</strong></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><strong>1. Inflation and rising costs</strong></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">Persistent inflation has pushed up the cost of nearly everything: groceries, housing, utilities, transport. For many households, especially those in the “bottom 80%” of income distribution, this means stretching every paycheck just to cover necessities. Credit cards become a fallback: a way to buy now, pay later.</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">When essentials take up more of a budget, there’s less room to build savings - which encourages carrying balances, as attested to by the debt specialists at <a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" class=\"text-blue-600 hover:text-blue-800 underline\" href=\"https://debtreliefkarma.com/\"><u>DebtReliefKarma</u></a>.</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><strong>2. High interest rates make things worse</strong></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">Credit cards remain one of the most expensive forms of borrowing. According to data from large banks, purchase APRs (annual percentage rates) for general-purpose cards in 2025 hover near 24.6% compared with around 20% during the pandemic period.&nbsp;</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">That means if you don’t pay off your balance each month, interest charges pile on fast, making debt harder to escape.</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><strong>3. Debt as a financial buffer - until it isn’t</strong></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">Many Americans are using cards not for luxury, but for essentials: groceries, household bills, basic living expenses. In good months, paying the balance might be manageable. But if income slips - or costs go up - carrying a balance becomes a trap.</p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\">For lower-income and middle-income households, credit cards are increasingly serving as a de facto safety net - one that can break under pressure.<br></p><div data-type=\"image\" class=\"w-full h-auto aspect-video object-cover editor-block\" data-image-type=\"media\" data-media-id=\"29099ea4-9416-4d1e-9905-3fe81a98e503\" data-media-url=\"https://mausdpdlpkuortcoddxg.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/cms_images/media/1778042465666-p6ku397mx2p.webp\" data-media-alt=\"Frustrated person holding a credit card while staring at a laptop screen.\" data-alt=\"Frustrated person holding a credit card while staring at a laptop screen.\" data-size=\"full\" data-aspect-ratio=\"16-9\"><img src=\"https://mausdpdlpkuortcoddxg.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/cms_images/media/1778042465666-p6ku397mx2p.webp\" alt=\"Frustrated person holding a credit card while staring at a laptop screen.\" class=\"w-full h-full object-cover\" loading=\"lazy\"></div>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.955657+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.955657+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"18b16e98-cd85-4eb2-af6d-cafbae547850","order":3,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Delinquency is rising again — and that’s a red flag</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>It’s one thing to carry a balance. It’s another to fall behind on payments. And that’s becoming more common. According to a 2025 analysis by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, the share of US credit card debt that is 30+ days delinquent has been rising in recent years, across all income and geographic groups.&nbsp;</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>More concerning, the share of accounts with 90+ days past due - a measure of severe delinquency - has also climbed. As of early 2025, delinquency rates measured this way returned to levels similar to those seen before the pandemic. This matters because once debt passes 90 days overdue, it drastically raises the risk of default, write-offs, and long-term credit damage for borrowers.&nbsp;</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>It’s also a sign of financial strain for households: missing payments often reflects real hardship - not just forgetfulness, but a lack of liquidity.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.992617+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:35.992617+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"d9e09b56-d29c-4710-9430-f0ee21ef264c","order":4,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>The costs are high</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Carrying credit card debt - especially long-term - carries steep consequences:</span></p><ul class=\"tiptap-ul\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Skyrocketing interest costs.</strong> With APRs near 25%, just carrying a moderate balance can mean paying hundreds or even thousands of dollars a year in interest.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Credit damage.</strong> Late payments, especially 90+ days overdue, can severely harm a consumer’s credit score — which in turn makes future borrowing more expensive or even impossible.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Less financial flexibility.</strong> As more income goes toward interest and minimum payments, there’s less left over for emergencies or savings.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Psychological stress.</strong> Money worries are among the most common sources of anxiety. Debt hanging over your head, especially when you feel you have little control, can take a real toll on mental well-being.</span></p></li></ul><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>For many low- and middle-income households, the safety net is disappearing just when it’s needed most.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.020417+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.020417+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"d1e24e17-9a92-4e47-842c-5e9baa9558b1","order":5,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Is this a sign of trouble — or a normal phase of the cycle?</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Some analysts urge caution before calling this a full-blown crisis. Indeed:</span></p><ul class=\"tiptap-ul\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>The overall delinquency rate for credit cards has recently leveled off. According to a November 2025 note from the Federal Reserve, the trend of rising delinquency has “flattened, on net, in the quarters leading up to Q3 2025.”&nbsp;</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Fewer than half of cardholders carry a balance.&nbsp;</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>For auto loans - another major consumer debt category - delinquency remains more stable than during the peak stress period.&nbsp;</span></p></li></ul><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Still, there are reasons to watch carefully. High interest rates are still squeezing budgets. Inflation remains stubborn. And a large credit-card burden makes households more vulnerable to any economic shock - job loss, health emergency, rent spike, or unexpected expense. In other words: the headline numbers may stabilize, but the underlying risk remains substantial - especially for lower-income Americans.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.099371+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.099371+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"da65f391-987c-4e34-88b2-df6d4ca26999","order":6,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Who is most vulnerable — and why it matters for the “bottom 80%”</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>The pain is not evenly distributed. According to the data, the burden of rising utilization and delinquency is disproportionately falling on households with lower or middle incomes.&nbsp;</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Why? Because for wealthier households - those with savings, investments, and more financial cushion - borrowing may be more opportunistic (like financing travel, luxury purchases, or big investments). But for many in the bottom 80%, debt is often the only way to pay for basic needs.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>When essential costs rise with inflation and wages don’t keep up, credit becomes a coping mechanism. But that coping mechanism carries risk: high-interest debt, missed payments, and growing financial fragility.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>If macroeconomic conditions worsen - if interest rates rise again, or inflation spikes, or job growth slows - those households could be hit hard.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.124954+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.124954+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"837db609-7ef2-42ea-9346-d8f16ec34708","order":7,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>What could happen next — and what to watch</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>1. A moment of reckoning</strong></span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>If enough households get pushed into serious delinquency or default, we could see higher rates of write-offs, tighter lending standards, and more conservative behavior among banks. That could make credit - even good credit - harder to come by for many.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>2. Higher interest costs — or rate cuts?</strong></span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Right now, credit card APRs are steep. If interest rates remain high, carrying balances will stay expensive. But if overall interest rates fall, it might ease some pressure - depending on how quickly those cuts feed through to credit-card rates and how lenders respond.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>3. More households living “on the edge”</strong></span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Even if delinquency rates don’t spike suddenly, the reality is many households are living on a thin financial margin. That means a small negative event, like a medical expense, emergency car repair, or rent increase, could tip them too far. Debt burdens could become chronic, savings could vanish, and many could fall deeper into financial vulnerability.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>4. Changes in lending behavior</strong></span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>Lenders may respond by tightening standards, raising interest rates for higher-risk borrowers, or reducing credit limits. That could help banks-side stability - but it might also reduce access to credit for people who need it most.</span></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.162419+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.162419+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"},{"id":"6215012c-e824-4d6a-9ac1-ecbb390d6389","order":8,"content":"<h2 class=\"tiptap-heading\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>What can consumers do?</strong></span></h2><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>If you find yourself in this situation - carrying a balance or struggling with payments - there are a few strategies worth considering:</span></p><ul class=\"tiptap-ul\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Pay more than the minimum.</strong> Even small extra payments reduce the balance faster and cut total interest costs.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Prioritize high-interest debt.</strong> If you have multiple cards (or other loans), focus first on the one with the highest APR - that’s where you save the most in interest.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Make a budget (and revisit it often).</strong> Track what’s essential (food, housing, utilities) and what’s discretionary (dining out, entertainment). During tough times, try to cut or postpone non-essential spending.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Build an emergency fund — even a small one.</strong> A cushion (even a few hundred dollars) can prevent a slide into more debt when something unexpected happens.</span></p></li><li><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span><strong>Seek help if needed.</strong> Non-profits, credit counselors, or community organizations sometimes offer advice or programs to help with debt, payment plans, or financial education, such as the ones available at </span><a target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" class=\"text-blue-600 hover:text-blue-800 underline\" href=\"http://debtreliefkarma.com\"><span><u>debtreliefkarma.com</u></span></a><span>.</span></p></li></ul><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>For policymakers or regulators, it’s also worth asking: Is there adequate support for lower- and middle-income households? Are interest rates and lending standards fair? And how do we ensure financial stability while preventing household distress?</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>The surge in US credit card debt - surpassing US$ 1.23 trillion in 2025 - is a striking, newsworthy signal. It reveals a country where many households are increasingly dependent on credit to meet basic needs. At the same time, rising delinquency rates show that this reliance is coming at a cost. For some, debt is now a source of stress and vulnerability, not just convenience.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>While it’s true that the overall delinquency rate has flattened recently, the fact remains: for many families, credit cards are no longer a financial tool - they are a necessity. And that means any shake-up in the economy could have serious consequences.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><span>If we value economic resilience - that is, households that can absorb shocks without defaulting, falling behind, or becoming trapped in debt - then this trend demands attention. Because when millions of people live “on the edge,” the consequences ripple far beyond individual credit scores: they affect entire communities, financial markets, and even national stability.</span></p><p class=\"tiptap-paragraph\" data-padding-top=\"none\" data-padding-right=\"none\" data-padding-bottom=\"none\" data-padding-left=\"none\" data-margin-top=\"none\" data-margin-right=\"none\" data-margin-bottom=\"none\" data-margin-left=\"none\"><br></p>","created_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.194727+00:00","updated_at":"2026-05-06T10:31:36.194727+00:00","custom_styling":null,"news_article_id":"57d1f749-d589-4ffc-bb62-0a9cf90e4be4","blockType":"content"}]}