Free net worth calculator. Add all assets and liabilities to calculate your total net worth. Track progress with asset and liability breakdown visualization.
Net worth is the single most important number in personal finance. It's calculated as: Total Assets − Total Liabilities = Net Worth. Assets include cash, investments, retirement accounts, real estate, and vehicles. Liabilities include mortgages, student loans, car loans, credit card debt, and other obligations.
Tracking net worth over time is more meaningful than tracking income. A high earner with spending problems can have a lower net worth than a moderate earner who saves consistently. Net worth captures the cumulative result of all your financial decisions.
This calculator lets you enter detailed assets and liabilities across categories, shows your net worth with a visual breakdown, and compares your position to age-based benchmarks. Net worth is the single most comprehensive measure of your financial health, combining every asset and liability into one number. Tracking it regularly reveals whether your wealth is growing, stagnating, or declining, and it highlights which specific areas, such as debt reduction or investment growth, deserve the most attention.
Knowing your net worth gives you a clear picture of where you stand financially. It cuts through income illusions and shows actual wealth. Tracking it quarterly or annually reveals whether you're moving forward or backward — and motivates continued progress. Reviewing net worth quarterly creates accountability and reveals patterns, such as lifestyle creep or debt accumulation, well before they become serious financial problems.
Net Worth = Σ Assets − Σ Liabilities Asset Ratio = Total Assets / Total Liabilities Debt-to-Asset Ratio = Total Liabilities / Total Assets × 100%
Result: Net Worth: $265,000
Total assets: $15K cash + $85K investments + $120K retirement + $350K home + $25K car = $595K. Total liabilities: $280K mortgage + $35K student loans + $12K car loan + $3K credit cards = $330K. Net worth = $595K − $330K = $265K.
Age 25: $10-50K. Age 30: $50-150K. Age 35: $150-300K. Age 40: $300-600K. Age 50: $500K-1.5M. Age 60: $1-3M. These are targets for on-track retirement savers. Your cost of living, location, and career path shift these significantly. Focus on consistent growth, not hitting exact benchmarks.
Total net worth includes illiquid assets like home equity. Liquid net worth excludes primary residence and other assets that can't be quickly converted to cash. For financial independence planning, liquid net worth is more relevant since it represents accessible wealth.
Research shows most millionaires don't look wealthy. They drive used cars, live in modest homes, and save 15-20% of income consistently for decades. Net worth is built through boring consistency, not flashy income. The $200K earner who spends $195K has less net worth than the $80K earner who saves $20K annually.
A common benchmark: net worth target = (Age × Annual Pre-Tax Income) / 10. A 30-year-old earning $60K should target $180K. By 40, double that. The median net worth for 35-44 year-olds in the US is about $91K; the average is $549K (skewed by high earners).
Yes, include home equity (home value minus mortgage balance). However, also track "investable net worth" (excluding primary residence) since you can't easily access home equity for living expenses in retirement without selling.
It's common for new graduates with student loans and young homebuyers with large mortgages. Negative net worth becomes concerning if it's not improving over time. Focus on the trajectory: is your net worth increasing each quarter?
Quarterly is ideal. Monthly is too noisy (market fluctuations). Annually is too infrequent to catch trends. Quarterly balances signal from noise and provides enough data points to see your trajectory clearly.
Assets: anything with market value you could sell. Include cash, investments, retirement accounts, real estate, vehicles. Don't include personal property (clothes, furniture), future income, or Social Security. Be conservative with vehicle and property values.
Three levers: (1) Increase income (career growth, side hustles). (2) Decrease spending (biggest impact is housing, cars, food). (3) Invest the difference (market returns compound). Paying off high-interest debt is the highest guaranteed return available.