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Millennials Are Starting to Spend More
Business Journal

Millennials Are Starting to Spend More

by John H. Fleming
Coauthor of
Chart: data points are described in article

Story Highlights

  • Millennials spend an average of $85 per day
  • Millennials more likely to show increased spending on leisure activities
  • Their financial freedom presents a substantial opportunity for brands

This article is the first in a two-part series on the millennial generation's spending habits.

Among Americans overall, spending has declined since 2008 -- the year of the financial crash. Currently, the millennial generation spends an average of $85 per day and accounts for 28% of all daily per-person consumer spending in the U.S. -- a number that is expected to climb as high as 35% over the next 15 years.

The U.S. economy has been recovering at a slow pace over the past eight years, with young adults' spending hit hardest by this lethargic progress. Gallup's latest report, , reports that in 2008, Americans aged 19 to 35 were spending an average of $98 per day. Among that same age group now, average daily spending has fallen by $13. Among older Americans, spending is close to -- if not on par with -- 2008 levels. Perhaps because of their lower wages and higher amounts of student debt, millennials have been unable to catch up to 2008 spending levels, while older generations are less likely to have those constraints.

However, there is positive spending momentum among millennials. Across all generations, fewer than four in 10 Americans (37%) say they are spending more than they were a year ago, but a larger proportion of millennials (42%) say they are spending more. It is worth noting, though, that Americans -- millennials included -- are spending more on things they need than on things they want. More millennials report spending more on nondiscretionary categories such as groceries (52%), utilities (37%) and healthcare (35%), while fewer are spending more on discretionary purchases such as leisure activities (33%), travel (26%) and dining out (26%).

Millennials Spending More on Leisure Activities

Although many spending categories that 优蜜传媒tracks show the same patterns across all generations, millennials are more likely to be directing their increased spending toward a slightly different set of categories than is true for older generations. Groceries, gasoline, utilities and healthcare make the top six on the "spending more" list for all generations, but millennials also say they are spending more on rent or mortgages and on leisure activities.

Millennials more likely than other generations to say they increased spending on rent or mortgages, leisure activities vs. a year ago
% "Spending more than a year ago"
  Millennials All others Gap (in pct. pts.)
  % %  
Groceries 52 58 -6
Gasoline or fuel 40 35 +5
Rent or mortgages 40 29 +11
Utilities 37 44 -7
Healthcare 35 47 -12
Leisure activities 33 22 +11
Travel 29 24 +5
Automotive expenses not including gas 29 26 +3
Clothing 28 20 +8
Telephone services 28 32 -4
Consumer electronics 27 18 +9
Cable or satellite 26 36 -10
Internet 26 23 +3
Dining out 26 25 +1
Home maintenance 24 36 -12
Household goods such as toilet paper or cleaning supplies 24 29 -5
Personal care such as toothpaste or cosmetics 23 24 -1
Retirement investments 21 17 +4
Gallup

Millennials' increased spending on leisure activities versus a year ago and versus other generations is intriguing, as it suggests they might be starting to free up their bank accounts and spend more on nonessentials. They are the only generation to do so, and this financial freedom presents a substantial amount of opportunity for .

Are millennials more likely or less likely than other generations to be thrifty? There isn't a simple answer to that question, as the next article in this series will uncover.

Download Gallup's latest report, , to get further insight into Gallup's most important findings about millennials, including their demographic makeup, spending habits and desires for the workplace.

Author(s)

John H. Fleming, Ph.D., is Chief Scientist -- Marketplace Consulting and HumanSigma at Gallup. He is coauthor of .


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