New year, new resolutions–and if you live in Lubbock, chances are “save more money” is sitting right at the top of your list…again.
But if that goal already feels out of reach, you’re not alone–and new data proves it’s not just a willpower problem.
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A new State of Savings Report from The Penny Hoarder, based on responses from 1,250 working Americans, shows that rising costs and stagnant wages have turned saving money into a serious uphill battle. And for a lot of families right here in Lubbock, the numbers hit uncomfortably close to home.
Saving Money Is the Goal — But Reality Hits Hard
According to the report, 63% of Americans don’t even have a savings account. Among those who do, the safety net is thin:
Only 37% of working Americans have a savings account
Half have just $1,000 saved
One in three has less than $500 set aside
For many people in Lubbock, that means one car repair, medical bill, or surprise expense can completely derail a household budget.
Living Paycheck to Paycheck Is the Norm
The report paints a picture that will feel familiar to a lot of South Plains households:
58% of Americans live paycheck to paycheck
50% need two incomes just to cover bills
45% have drained their savings entirely
11% have had to do it multiple times
In a city where housing costs, groceries, utilities, and insurance have all climbed, many Lubbock families say budgeting has shifted from planning ahead to simply getting through the month.
The Math Isn’t Mathing
Here’s one of the most eye-opening stats from the report:
That gap alone explains why saving feels impossible. Even people who understand budgeting and grew up learning “good money habits” are stuck in survival mode. The issue isn’t knowledge–it’s affordability.
Credit Cards, Stress, and Setbacks
When savings run out, credit often steps in:
29% rely on credit for big purchases
One in 10 haven’t checked their credit score
20% admit they don’t handle financial setbacks well
For Lubbock residents juggling rent, gas, groceries, and kids’ expenses, it’s easy to see how quickly financial stress can pile up.
What This Means for Lubbock
The takeaway isn’t that people in Lubbock are bad with money. It’s that the cost of living has outpaced paychecks, turning saving into a luxury instead of a habit.
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If you’ve been feeling frustrated about your finances this year, the data makes one thing clear: you’re far from alone–and the struggle is bigger than any single budget spreadsheet.
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