When you hear "net worth," your brain probably jumps to billionaires on Forbes lists. But net worth isn't a rich-people metric — it's honestly the most real number about your financial health. And the earlier you start tracking it, the more powerful it becomes.
What Is Net Worth, Exactly?
Your net worth is simple math:
Net Worth = Total Assets - Total Liabilities
Assets are everything you own that has value: cash in your checking and savings accounts, investments (401k, Roth IRA, brokerage accounts), the resale value of your car, cryptocurrency, and any other valuables.
Liabilities are everything you owe: student loans, credit card debt, car loans, personal loans, and any other outstanding balances.
Subtract liabilities from assets, and you get a single number that represents where you financially stand. For a lot of people in their 20s, this number is negative — and that's completely normal.
Why It Matters Way More Than Income
Income tells you how much water is flowing into the bucket. Net worth tells you how much water is actually in the bucket. You can earn $80,000 a year and still have a negative net worth if you're buried in debt and spending everything you make.
Tracking your net worth kinda forces you to zoom out from the month-to-month noise of expenses and see the bigger trajectory. Are you moving in the right direction? Are your assets growing faster than your debts? That's what actually matters.
The Average Net Worth in Your 20s
According to the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, the median net worth for Americans under 35 is around $39,000. But averages are misleading — if you're fresh out of college with $30k in student loans and $2k in savings, your net worth is -$28,000. That's a perfectly normal starting point.
The goal isn't to compare yourself to averages. The goal is to see your own number improve over time. Going from -$28,000 to -$20,000 is real, measurable progress — even though both numbers are negative.
How to Calculate Yours in 10 Minutes
Grab your phone and make two lists:
- Assets: Check balances for every bank account, retirement account, investment account, and anything else with real value (car, crypto, etc.).
- Liabilities: Check balances for every loan, credit card, and debt you owe.
Subtract the liabilities from the assets. That's your net worth today. Write it down. This is your starting point.
Make It a Monthly Habit
Checking your net worth once is interesting. Checking it every month is transformative. When you see the number move — even by $200 — it creates a feedback loop that reinforces good financial behavior.
With LiteWork Finance, you can track your net worth with the net worth tracker. Add your assets and liabilities, take monthly snapshots, and watch your progress visualized over time. It takes less than two minutes per month and gives you a clear picture of your financial trajectory.
Strategies to Grow Your Net Worth
Once you're tracking, here are the levers you can pull:
- Pay down high-interest debt aggressively. Credit card debt at 22% APR is the fastest way to destroy net worth. Attack it first.
- Build an emergency fund. 3-6 months of expenses in a high-yield savings account. This prevents new debt from unexpected costs.
- Start investing early. Even $100/month into an index fund at age 23 can grow to over $200,000 by age 55 thanks to compound interest.
- Increase your income. Negotiate raises, develop marketable skills, or start a side hustle. More money in means more fuel for the other three strategies.
- Keep lifestyle inflation in check. When you get a raise, don't automatically upgrade everything. Funnel the difference into savings and investments.
It Snowballs (In a Good Way)
Net worth growth is exponential, not linear. The first $10,000 is the hardest. But once your investments start compounding, the momentum builds on itself. Your money earns money, which earns more money. Best time to start was yesterday. Second best is right now.
Open LiteWork Finance, set up your net worth tracker, and take your first snapshot today. You'll thank yourself in five years.