US Consumer Debt Hits $17.5 Trillion in Q4 2023
In the US, consumer debt increased by $212 billion or 1.2% from the previous quarter, reaching a new high of $17.50 trillion in the last quarter of 2023. The amount owed on mortgages increased by $112 billion to $12.25 trillion at the end of December. Credit card debt grew by $50 billion (or 4.6%), reaching $1.13 trillion. Car loans also went up by $12 billion, continuing a rise in the second quarter of 2020 to a total of $1.61 trillion. Other types of loans, including retail cards and various consumer loans, saw an increase of $25 billion.
Student loans barely changed, with a slight rise of $2 billion, totaling $1.6 trillion. Overall, debt not related to housing increased by $89 billion. More people fell behind on their payments, with delinquency rates rising slightly. Around 3.1% of all debt was late on payments, a slight increase of 0.1 percentage points from the third quarter, yet 1.6 percentage points lower than at the end of 2019.
Student loans barely changed, with a slight rise of $2 billion, totaling $1.6 trillion. Overall, debt not related to housing increased by $89 billion. More people fell behind on their payments, with delinquency rates rising slightly. Around 3.1% of all debt was late on payments, a slight increase of 0.1 percentage points from the third quarter, yet 1.6 percentage points lower than at the end of 2019.