Financial collapse three months away. That’s the average cushion most Americans say they have before the bills stop getting paid. Not six months. Not a year. Three.
A national survey of 1,421 adults, conducted in February 2026 by JG Wentworth, found that 40.8% of respondents could cover basic living expenses for three months if their income were to disappear. Another 9.5% said two months. Another 5.4% said less than one. On the other end, just 3% said they could stretch their savings beyond six months.
The margin between stability and crisis — for most households — is razor-thin.
What makes that number land harder is what lies on the other side. According to the same survey, it takes an average of just $6,356 in additional debt beyond existing obligations to push an American household toward bankruptcy. Non-business bankruptcy filings rose 10.8% between September 2024 and September 2025, per federal court data. The survey’s findings go a long way toward explaining why: a growing share of Americans simply don’t have enough buffer to absorb a bad month, let alone a prolonged financial shock.
The System Is Running on Fumes
When respondents who had filed for bankruptcy were asked what triggered it, the top answers weren’t personal missteps. The cost-of-living crisis led the way at 43.4%, followed closely by the impact of increased tariffs at 41.7%. Tariffs are taxes on imported goods — when companies pay more to bring products into the country, those costs tend to get passed along as higher prices at the register. Medical expenses ranked third at 3.7%, with credit card or personal loan debt (3.2%) and job loss (2.6%) rounding out the top five.
Overspending, poor financial planning, and mortgage or interest rate increases each registered at 0.3% or below. For most filers, bankruptcy wasn’t the result of living beyond their means — it was the result of the means themselves running dry.
Among participants who had never filed for bankruptcy, 45.5% said they are managing comfortably. Among those who had filed, only 5.6% said the same.
When There’s No Cushion, Essentials Are the First to Go
Nearly nine in ten respondents (86.9%) said they had already skipped an essential payment at some point due to financial pressure. Rent was the most commonly missed obligation (60.4%), followed by mortgage payments (59.9%) and gasoline (48.9%). Medical insurance (38.2%) and doctor visits (26.2%) also made the list.
When asked what they would cut first if things got worse, dining out topped the list (72.2%), followed by takeout orders (70.3%) and coffee (58.6%). Streaming services and concert tickets followed. What participants were least willing to give up: socializing (7.2%), attending events like weddings and birthdays (7.2%), and buying gifts for others (8%). Even under financial duress, social connection appears to function as its own kind of necessity.
As for actual crisis response, the first move most said they’d make was cutting expenses (41.5%), followed by declaring bankruptcy (34.6%). Borrowing from family or friends ranked last as a first step (5.3%), even though 79.4% said they’d eventually consider it. The gap between what people would do first and what they’d ultimately resort to tells its own story about how quickly options narrow once income disappears.
Bankruptcy’s Lasting Damage Goes Beyond the Credit Score
Recovery from bankruptcy is possible, but it doesn’t arrive quickly or cleanly. Among those who had filed, 89.3% said they eventually rebuilt their finances, with most taking three to five years. Just 1% said they were still struggling as a direct result of the filing.
But “financially recovered” and “unaffected” are not the same thing. An overwhelming 97.8% of filers said they are still feeling the effects of their bankruptcy today, regardless of how long ago they filed. Nearly three-quarters (73.7%) reported ongoing difficulty obtaining loans or credit, and 73.3% said their credit score remains damaged. For 71.2%, bankruptcy had at some point prevented them from renting a home or apartment. Another 70.5% said it blocked them from buying property, and 60.7% said it stood between them and a loan or mortgage.
Among those who hadn’t fully recovered financially, the main barriers were high living costs (88.4%), low income or unemployment (85.8%), and continued medical expenses (82.5%). Lack of financial knowledge or guidance ranked far lower, at 4.2%, again pointing to structural conditions as the primary obstacle.
The experience also takes an emotional toll that rivals that of some of life’s most demanding events. Among those who had filed, more than a third said bankruptcy was more stressful than buying their first home (36.6%) or having a child (35.5%). Divorce was the only comparable benchmark, landing at roughly the same stress level as the bankruptcy process itself.
The Prescription Is Straightforward — The Conditions Aren’t
When asked what would most improve their financial security going forward, the top answer across all respondents was increasing income or job stability (33.4%), followed by better financial education or guidance (27.4%) and broader health insurance coverage (22.3%). For most, the prescription is straightforward.
The harder question is whether the conditions that allow it are actually within reach.