
Six figures used to mean you’d made it. But in 2025, earning $100,000 puts you in a weird middle zone where you’re doing better than most Americans but still nowhere near rich.
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Here’s exactly where $100,000 lands you in the national income rankings and why the answer depends on whether you’re talking about individual earnings or household income.
Individual Earners: Well Above Median, but Not Near the Very Top
If you personally make $100,000 per year, you are well above the median income for individuals, which is about $53,010 in 2025. However, precise percentile ranks vary depending on dataset. One estimate places the threshold for the top 1% of individual earners at about $450,100 in 2025. So, in this case, you make more than the majority of individual earners, but you’re still quite far from the top of the income distribution.
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Households: Modestly Above Average
When looking at household income (all earners in the home), the picture shifts. According to one estimate, about 42.8% of U.S. households earned $100,000 or more in 2025. If 42.8% earn $100,000 or more, then a $100,000 household income corresponds roughly to the 57th percentile (i.e., you make more than around 57% of households) under that dataset. The median household income estimate for 2025 is about $83,592.
Still Technically Middle Class
According to Pew Research Center, for a three-person household the “middle-income” range in 2022 dollars was about $56,600 to $169,800. A household earning $100,000 places you squarely in the middle-income range under that definition — you’re not lower-income, but neither are you upper class.
Geography & Family Size Change Everything
It’s worth emphasizing that where you live and how many dependents you support make a huge difference in how far $100,000 goes. In a high-cost metro (e.g., San Francisco, New York City), housing and child care can consume large parts of that income. In a lower-cost region (e.g., midwestern or rural areas), $100,000 can buy a comfortable home, allow savings and feel more like upper income locally.
And a single person earning $100,000 has a very different lifestyle than a family of four earning the same.
What This Actually Means
Earning $100,000 per year puts you ahead of most individual earners and modestly ahead of most households. You’re definitely doing better than average. But you’re not rich, and you’re not in the upper-income tier by national standards. You’re in a broad middle zone: comfortable (especially in many areas) but still subject to cost-of-living pressures and not among the elite. The six-figure figure no longer universally signals affluence; it depends a lot on location, household size and expenses.
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This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: If You Earn $100K a Year, Here’s Where You Actually Rank Among All Americans