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View all →Only 47% of Americans could cover a surprise $1,000 expense from savings, 24% have no emergency fund at all, and 58% say their cushion hasn't grown in a year. Bankrate's 2026 data lays bare a quiet budgeting crisis. Here's what the numbers actually say — and the smallest move that flips your odds.
Foreclosures just hit a six-year high — nearly 119,000 filings in Q1 2026, up 26% from a year ago — and the trigger isn't interest rates. It's the two line items hiding in your escrow account. Homeowners insurance climbed to roughly $2,950 a year and property taxes now average $4,427, together eating about 21% of the typical mortgage payment. Here's why a fixed-rate loan no longer means a fixed bill, and how to get ahead of your next escrow analysis.
With card APRs averaging 21.52% on balances that accrue interest and personal loans averaging 12.28%, a debt consolidation loan can close a roughly 9-point gap and save thousands. But the loan only works if you avoid three specific traps. Here's the decision framework — and the exact math — before you sign.
Americans now owe a record $1.68 trillion on their cars, the average new-car payment hit an all-time-high $767 a month, and subprime borrowers are falling behind at the worst rate since 1994. Nearly a third of trade-ins are underwater. Here's what's driving the squeeze — and the concrete moves to keep your car loan from sinking your budget.
The 2026 Trustees Report moved the retirement trust fund's depletion date up to late 2032, a quarter earlier than last year's estimate. But 'depletion' doesn't mean zero — it means an automatic 17% haircut on every check unless Congress acts. Here's what the real numbers say and how to plan around the gap instead of panicking over it.
American homeowners now hold a record $11.5 trillion in tappable equity, yet 76% are locked into a sub-6% mortgage they refuse to give up. That's why the cash-out refinance is dead and the HELOC is back: borrowers pulled $47 billion from their homes in Q1 2026 without touching their first lien. Here's the math on doing it right.
FICO's new Score 10 BNPL models pull Buy Now, Pay Later loans onto your credit report for the first time, just as 47% of users admit to paying one late in the past year. With half of U.S. adults now using BNPL, that invisible credit line is becoming very visible. Here's what changes and the moves to make before lenders flip the switch.
The index is up double digits in 2026 and hit a fresh record on June 2. The catch: the top 10 stocks now make up about 36% of it, so a 'diversified' index fund behaves more like a bet on a dozen AI names. Here are the myths to drop before you chase the high — or the SpaceX IPO.
May's CPI hit a three-year high, yet groceries barely budged and core inflation actually cooled. The whole story is energy. Here's exactly where the 4.2% is hiding in your monthly budget — and the line items to defend first.
National median rent slipped to $1,379 and is down 1.5% from a year ago, while vacancy sits at a record 7.2% and nearly 40% of listings are dangling concessions. After the biggest apartment-building boom since 1986, the leverage has flipped to tenants. Here's exactly how to use it before you sign.
Credit card balances hit a record $1.252 trillion in Q1 2026, and at a 21% average APR the minimum-payment trap can stretch a $5,000 balance into 23 years and $7,700 of interest. This is a data-deep-dive into what's actually driving the number — and the payoff math that beats it.
A federal court killed the SAVE plan, and on July 1 servicers begin a 90-day countdown for roughly 7.5 million borrowers to choose a new repayment plan — or get dropped into one for you. Here's the step-by-step to protect your monthly payment.
The IRS lifted the 401(k) cap to $24,500 and the IRA cap to $7,500 for 2026. But the bigger story is a SECURE 2.0 mandate that, starting this year, forces 50-and-older workers earning over $145,000 to route catch-up contributions into Roth dollars. Here is what every number means for your paycheck.
The Federal Reserve kept its benchmark rate at 3.5%–3.75% for a third straight meeting amid surging energy prices and stubborn inflation. Here's what that means if you're buying or refinancing a home right now.
A 2% cash-back card pays you out of merchant interchange fees — not the issuer’s pocket. Understanding the mechanics shapes the smartest way to redeem.
A 2% flat-rate card is boring. A 5% rotating-category card looks exciting. But the spreadsheet is rarely on the side of the rotating card.
Statement credits reduce your bill. Deposit cash hits your bank. Both are advertised as "$1 = $1" — but they affect your finances differently.
A 5% bonus category is capped — usually at $1,500 of spend per quarter. After the cap, you are earning 1%. The flat-rate card never has a cap.
Two cards, three cards, four cards — at some point category stacking yields diminishing returns. Here is where to stop.
Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Capital One Miles — they all look like points, but they unlock different airlines and hotel programs.
Free bags, priority boarding, a companion fare — airline cards charge a fee for perks. Most justify the fee on a single round-trip per year.
Some premium hotel cards include automatic mid-tier status — Marriott Gold, Hilton Diamond, Hyatt Discoverist. Here is when it is worth the fee.
Dynamic award pricing has eroded the easy sweet spots. The good redemptions are still out there — but you have to search smarter than you used to.
Most US credit cards charge 3% on every foreign purchase. A handful do not. On a single international trip, the difference often exceeds an annual fee.