What is Your Net Worth?

Homeownership remains one of the most important drivers of household wealth in the United States. Comparing the population and net worth of homeowners versus renters reveals stark differences that shape economic opportunity, financial stability, and inequality across the country.

Homeowners make up the majority of U.S. households. As of recent national data, roughly 65%–67% of occupied housing units are owner-occupied, while 33%–35% are renter-occupied. Homeowners tend to be older on average than renters, more likely to be married, and more likely to live in suburban or rural areas. Renters skew younger, include more single-person and nonfamily households, and are concentrated in urban centers and more expensive coastal metros.

The most striking difference between homeowners and renters is in net worth. Net worth measures total assets (savings, investments, home equity, retirement accounts) minus liabilities (mortgages, credit card debt, student loans). Homeowners typically have far higher median and mean net worth than renters.  Median net worth for homeowner households commonly falls in the six-figure range when home equity is included, whereas median renter net worth frequently registers under $10,000.

Why the gap is so large

  1. Home equity as forced savings: For many families, mortgage payments function like forced savings, gradually converting mortgage principal into home equity. Over decades, this builds a large portion of household wealth.
  2. Appreciation: Historically, residential real estate has appreciated in value, providing homeowners with capital gains that renters miss unless they invest similarly elsewhere.
  3. Access to tax benefits and leverage: Homeowners benefit from mortgage interest deductions (for those who itemize) and can leverage mortgage credit to buy larger assets; they also have access to home equity lines of credit for large expenses or investments.
  4. Selection and lifecycle effects: Because homeownership is correlated with age, education, and income, homeowners often have higher lifetime earnings and more opportunity to accumulate savings and investments beyond their home.
  5. Stability and intergenerational transfer: Homeowners are more likely to pass down home equity through inheritances or to use it for education, business startups, or retirement, promoting multigenerational wealth.

Bottom line, homeownership remains a primary engine of household net worth in the U.S., creating a persistent and large gap between homeowners and renters.