Consumer Borrowing Continues to Sag Signaling Economic Pain on Main Street

For the second straight month, consumer borrowing was weak, indicating Americans might be close to their credit limits.

Over the last several months, credit card spending has dropped, signaling that Americans may be running out of borrowing power. This is bad news for an economy that depends on consumers buying stuff to stay afloat.

After a one-off surge in April, consumer borrowing tanked in May and was tepid again in June.

Consumer debt grew by just $7.4 billion in June, a 1.8 percent annual change, according to the latest data from the Federal Reserve.

Americans now owe $5.05 trillion in consumer debt.

The Federal Reserve consumer debt figures include credit card debt, student loans, and auto loans, but do not factor in mortgage debt. When you include mortgages, U.S. households are buried under a record level of debt. As of the end of Q1 2025, total household debt stood at $18.2 trillion.

Credit card borrowing plunged in May and dipped again in June. Revolving debt, primarily reflecting credit card balances, shrank by -1.0 percent in June. That follows on the heels of a -3.5 percent decline in May.

Even with the decline, Americans still owe $1.3 trillion in revolving debt.

The double whammy of rising debt and interest rates exacerbates the debt problem. The average annual percentage rate (APR) currently stands at 20.13 percent, with some companies still charging rates as high as 28 percent. The average is only slightly down from the record high of 20.79 percent set last August.

Americans are clearly feeling the pinch. LegalShield’s Consumer Stress Index (CSLI) increased by 4.4 percent in the second quarter and is at the highest level since November 2020, when the economy was shut down during the pandemic.