28 March 2026

Americans Increased Their Borrowing

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Americans increased their borrowing this summer, taking out more new mortgages for the first time in over a year while adding to their car, credit-card and education loans. For the most part, consumers are taking on new loans carefully, yet late payments on one fast-growing category of debt—student loans—are worsening, new figures from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York show.

Household debt—including mortgages, credit cards, auto loans and student loans—rose $78 billion between July and September to $11.7 trillion. Debt levels had fallen the previous quarter and remain $1 trillion below their peak in 2008.

The numbers suggest Americans are gradually borrowing again after years of shedding debt. With cheaper gasoline and easier-to-find jobs, more borrowing could fuel holiday shopping and give more succor to the economy, which depends on consumers for roughly two-thirds of its activity.

New mortgage loans, including refinanced mortgages, edged up to $337 billion after four straight quarters of declines, the Fed’s figures showed. Total mortgage balances—the biggest part of Americans’ debt—climbed $35 billion to $8.1 trillion.

While historically low, the uptick in new mortgages is a welcome sign for the nation’s housing market, which has struggled even as the economy comes off its best six-month stretch of growth since 2003. In addition, auto lenders made $105 billion in new loans, the highest level in nearly a decade. Outstanding student loans rose $8 billion to $1.1 trillion.

Credit-card balances, which have generally been slow to rise, are now slightly above year-ago levels. Separate data released Tuesday showed the U.S. economy grew at an annualized clip of 3.9% last quarter, more than previously estimated—thanks partly to upwardly revised estimates of consumer spending.

Even amid the uptick in borrowing, Americans seem to be mindful of not biting off more than they can chew. And they are doing better paying their debts on time, both good signs given the borrowing binge before the financial crisis.

The share of mortgage debt seriously overdue dropped to 3.2% last quarter, from 3.4% in the second quarter. The share of seriously delinquent auto-loan debt also dropped, to 3.1%, from 3.3%—despite growing concerns about lax auto lending. Serious credit-card delinquencies eased, too.

One glaring problem in America’s debt picture is student loans: The share of student-loan debt 90 or more days overdue rose last quarter to 11.1%, from 10.9%—and even this figure understates the problem, the New York Fed says.

Growing student-loan burdens are troubling to economists and policy makers because they could keep, or at least delay, younger Americans from saving or spending in other ways, such as buying homes. And unlike other types of consumer debt, education loans are hard to discharge in bankruptcy—making them more of a potential drag on a borrower’s consumer behavior.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

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