- The percentage of US credit-card balances 90 or more days delinquent rose to 13.12% in Q1 2026 — the highest level in 15 years and the worst reading since the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis — according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
- Total US credit-card debt hit $1.25 trillion in Q1, up from $1.18 trillion a year ago and the highest first-quarter balance since the New York Fed began recording the measure in 1999; the average cardholder carries $6,500–$6,700 in balances, and the share holding more than $10,000 has risen across all income levels since 2018.
- Average credit-card interest rates reached 21% in February 2026, up from 14.6% in February 2022 — a 640 basis point surge that makes it nearly impossible for minimum-payment borrowers to reduce principal, effectively trapping balances in a compounding cycle.
- Credit-counseling agencies are overwhelmed: the National Foundation for Credit Counseling reported 24% more clients in January than a year earlier, with average monthly client volume running 60% above 2018 levels — and its delinquency-risk forecast has been at its highest reading since the measure launched in 2022.
What Happened?
A combination of the highest credit-card rates in decades, persistent Iran war-driven inflation, and a housing market that has locked millions of households into financially stretched positions has pushed US credit-card delinquencies to their worst level since the financial crisis. The NY Fed data shows 13.12% of balances 90+ days past due — a figure that captures not just lower-income households but middle and upper-income communities as well. Urban Institute data shows 60-day delinquency rates rising across all income tiers since 2022. Credit counselors describe a shift to “survival debt” — borrowers who stopped paying credit cards not out of carelessness but because they prioritized keeping their homes, cars, and utilities. The National Foundation for Credit Counseling is seeing its highest client volumes since tracking began, and average monthly clients are running 60% above 2018 levels.
Why It Matters?
Credit-card delinquency is a lagging indicator of consumer financial stress — it reflects decisions made months earlier when households ran out of alternatives. The current reading, at 15-year highs, suggests that the inflation and rate shock of the past several years has done more lasting damage to household balance sheets than headline employment figures imply. For the Federal Reserve, rising delinquencies are a counterweight to tightening: they signal that the existing rate level is already causing financial distress in the consumer sector, even before any additional hikes. For banks, rising charge-offs are beginning to appear in Q1 earnings; if delinquency rates continue climbing, provisions will need to increase meaningfully. For investors and policymakers, the data point that stands out is the spread across income levels — this is not purely a low-income phenomenon. Middle-class “survival debt” suggests a broader demand destruction dynamic that will compound the spending pullback already visible in consumer confidence data.
What’s Next?
The delinquency rate is unlikely to peak until either inflation falls meaningfully — relieving monthly cash flow pressure — or interest rates decline, allowing minimum payments to actually reduce principal. A Hormuz reopening and oil price normalization would help on the inflation dimension; rate cuts require the Fed to be confident inflation is sustainably declining, which Thursday’s PCE data has complicated. Watch Q2 bank earnings for charge-off guidance: JPMorgan, Citi, and Capital One are the most exposed large-cap names. The November midterm elections are also a political pressure point — Republican members of Congress are already flagging mounting voter anxiety over the economy, and credit-card delinquency data at financial-crisis levels is exactly the kind of number that changes the political calculus on Iran deal urgency.
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Source: The Wall Street Journal











