Setting New Financial Goals Feels Powerful; Sticking to Them Can Be Tough
For many Americans, saving is the new self-care
Among those setting financial resolutions, confidence in achieving those goals in the coming year is high, with one-third very confident, half somewhat confident, and only one-in-seven less than somewhat confident.
Financial goal setting adds a feeling of financial control and makes it easier to say no to unnecessary spending for the majority.
Survey highlights include:
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Slightly less than two-in-five (37%) Americans age 25+ with household incomes under
$100K have or expect to have New Year’s resolutions for 2026. The other three-in-five do not have nor expect to have any New Year’s resolutions for 2026 (42%) or are not yet sure (22%).
- Among those who have or expect to have New Year’s resolutions for 2026, almost all (97%) have already set or are considering financial resolutions as part of their 2026 resolutions. These financial goal-setters have fairly high confidence in achieving the goals in 2026.
- Among those with 2026 New Year’s resolution plans, saving more money is the top financial resolution, garnering 70% selection.
- After saving more money (70%), about half (49%) resolve to spend less or reduce expenses, while roughly two-in-five strive to improve their credit score (39%), pay off debt (38%), or start a side hustle or new income stream (35%).
Attitudes towards savings
While saving money has a favorable connotation in terms of attitude, consumers do feel a compromise between saving and spending.
- More than four in five (81%) feel saving money feels like self-care versus 19% who feel saving money feels like self-denial.
- The majority (72%) also feel saving money makes them happy as compared with 28% who state saving money means sacrificing happiness.
- Saving money gives freedom according to 70% of respondents versus 30% who felt saving money limits my freedom.
- Affordability to save is split between 56% who state they can’t afford not to save right now versus 44% who can’t afford to save right now.
Setting financial goals
The study found the majority (72%) of Americans age 25 or older with an annual household income under
- A large portion (85%) agree (strongly + somewhat) they feel more confident when having clear financial goals.
- Eight-in-ten (81%) agree having financial goals makes it easier to say no to unnecessary spending.
- Another eight-in-ten (80%) agree that creating a budget helps them feel more in control of their finances.
- Nearly two-thirds (64%) agree setting financial goals is easy — sticking to them is where they have difficulty.
- Fewer than four-in-ten (39%) agree they find it challenging to align my personal goals with my family’s priorities, with 51% disagreeing (disagree strongly 22% + disagree somewhat 29%) and 11% responding this does not apply to them.
Starr acknowledges the difficulty in setting a New Year’s resolution and creating new financial goals but knows that goal setting increases confidence and helps reduce unnecessary spending for most. “Separate spend from save. To do this, open a dedicated savings account, turn on balance alerts, and auto‑transfer1 a small amount each payday — say
1Terms and conditions apply. Setup is required for transfers to and/or from other
Member
About the survey
The findings are from a
About
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jackie.knolhoff@wellsfargo.com
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