Net worth = Total Assets − Total Liabilities. That’s the entire formula. Everything you own minus everything you owe equals your net worth—the single most honest snapshot of your financial health. If you are learning how to calculate net worth, remember to include everything from your retirement accounts and home equity to your credit card balances and student loans.
It sounds simple, and the math is. The harder part is making sure you’re counting the right things on each side of the equation.
Assets: What Counts
An asset is anything of value you own or are owed.
| Asset Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Cash & savings | Checking accounts, savings accounts, money market funds |
| Investments | Stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, 401(k), IRA, pension value |
| Real estate | Primary home (current market value), rental properties |
| Business ownership | Your share of a business you own (estimated value) |
| Vehicles | Cars, boats, motorcycles (current resale value) |
| Personal property | Jewelry, art, collectibles (realistic appraisal value) |
| Other receivables | Money owed to you (only if realistically collectible) |
Key rule: Use current market value, not what you paid for it. Your house may be worth more or less than you bought it for. Your car is definitely worth less.
Liabilities: What Counts
A liability is any debt or financial obligation you owe.
| Liability Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Mortgage | Outstanding balance on home loan(s) |
| Auto loans | Balance owed on vehicle financing |
| Student loans | Federal and private student loan balances |
| Credit cards | Total outstanding balances |
| Personal loans | Any outstanding personal or family loans |
| Medical debt | Unpaid medical bills |
| Business debt | Personal guarantees on business loans |
| Tax debt | Back taxes owed to IRS or state |
Worked Example
Let’s say you have:
Assets:
- Checking + savings: $18,000
- 401(k): $45,000
- Home value: $320,000
- Car: $22,000
- Total Assets: $405,000
Liabilities:
- Mortgage balance: $245,000
- Car loan: $14,000
- Credit card debt: $6,500
- Student loans: $28,000
- Total Liabilities: $293,500
Net Worth = $405,000 − $293,500 = $111,500

What Is a “Good” Net Worth?
Net worth benchmarks vary by age, income, and location – but here are commonly cited guidelines:
| Age | Median Net Worth (US) | General Benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| Under 35 | ~$39,000 | Positive net worth; paying down debt |
| 35-44 | ~$135,000 | Saving aggressively; home equity building |
| 45-54 | ~$247,000 | Peak earning years; growing investments |
| 55-64 | ~$364,000 | Pre-retirement accumulation |
| 65+ | ~$409,000 | Drawing down assets in retirement |
These are medians – meaning half of Americans in each group are above, half below. Don’t let the numbers discourage you if you’re behind; they include people with significant inherited wealth.
The Human Element: What Your Net Worth Actually Means
Here’s something the spreadsheets don’t tell you: a negative net worth in your 20s is completely normal if you have student loans and haven’t had time to build assets. What matters more than the number today is the trajectory – is it growing?
Track your net worth quarterly. If it’s moving in the right direction – even slowly – you’re doing the right things. Most people who reach a strong net worth in retirement did it through decades of boring consistency, not one big windfall.
How to Grow Net Worth Over Time
- Increase assets: Invest consistently, pay down your mortgage, build emergency savings
- Decrease liabilities: Attack high-interest debt first (credit cards), then student loans
- Avoid lifestyle inflation: Earning more doesn’t build net worth if spending rises equally
Net worth is the one number that captures your complete financial picture. Calculate it once now, then track it every few months – it’s the most motivating financial metric you can follow.
