What is net worth?
Net worth is the total value of everything you own (assets) minus the total of what you owe (liabilities). It's the foundational measure of financial position. Positive net worth means you'd have money left over if you sold everything and paid all debts. Negative net worth means debts exceed assets β common for young adults with student loans before careers ramp up.
Should I include my home in net worth?
Yes β but track it both ways. Include home value as asset and mortgage as liability for total net worth. Also track "net worth without home equity" since you need to live somewhere β home equity isn't usable for retirement unless you downsize or take a reverse mortgage. Both numbers tell different parts of the story.
What is liquid net worth?
Liquid net worth is your liquid assets (cash + investments you could sell within days) minus all liabilities. It represents the cash you'd have if you needed to convert everything quickly. For most homeowners, liquid net worth is negative because the mortgage exceeds liquid assets β even when total net worth is positive. It's a useful stress-test of financial flexibility.
How often should I calculate net worth?
Monthly or quarterly works for most people. Calculate at the same time each period for consistent tracking. Investment account values fluctuate daily so monthly snapshots show the trend without daily noise. Tools like Personal Capital, Empower, Mint, or YNAB can automate the calculation by linking accounts.
What's a good net worth?
It depends on age, income, and goals. A common benchmark: by age 30, net worth = 1Γ annual income; age 40 = 2-3Γ; age 50 = 5-6Γ; age 60+ = 8-10Γ (enough to retire). The "Wealth Formula" suggests target net worth = (age Γ income) / 10. These are guidelines, not rules β your specific cost of living and retirement plans matter more.
Should I include my car in net worth?
It's debated. Some advisors exclude vehicles because they depreciate fast (~15-20% per year) and aren't true wealth-building assets. Others include them at current Kelley Blue Book value for a complete picture. We recommend including them β the auto loan is already a liability, so excluding the asset would understate net worth. Use realistic resale value, not what you paid.
What is debt-to-asset ratio?
Total liabilities divided by total assets, expressed as a percentage. Under 30% is excellent (low debt burden), 30-50% is moderate, 50-75% is high, over 75% is concerning. For young adults with mortgages and student loans, 50-70% is common; the ratio should decline as you age. It's a quick gauge of financial leverage.
What about my pension or future Social Security?
Tradition is to exclude both from net worth since they're future income streams, not current assets you control or can liquidate. Some advanced calculations include the present value of pensions for a complete retirement picture, but most personal finance tracking excludes them. Focus on what you can directly track and change.
How do I value my home accurately?
Use the average of: Zillow Zestimate, Redfin Estimate, and a recent comparable-sales analysis from a local agent. These three sources together give a reasonable range. Conservative buyers should use the lower end. Don't use what you paid (unless very recent) or what you hope to get β use current market reality.
Why is my liquid net worth negative?
If you have a mortgage, your mortgage balance probably exceeds your liquid assets (cash + investments outside retirement). This is normal β even for wealthy homeowners. Negative liquid net worth signals that you couldn't pay off all debt quickly, which is fine if you have stable income and growing total net worth. It becomes concerning only if income is unstable.
Does inheritance count toward net worth?
Yes β once you've received it. Future expected inheritance shouldn't be counted because it's not yours yet. Many inheritances change due to medical costs, family decisions, or the giver outliving expectations. Plan your finances assuming no inheritance; treat any received as a bonus.
What's the fastest way to grow net worth?
Three levers, in order of impact: (1) Increase income through career growth, side income, or skill-building. (2) Increase savings rate β most Americans save 5%; high net worth tends to save 20%+. (3) Eliminate high-interest debt before investing in moderate-return assets. Boring but consistent beats clever and inconsistent every time.