Paychecks aren’t just numbers — they’re little snapshots of where we are in life.
They reflect the effort we put in, the industries we work in, and even the bigger economic trends shaping our world. For millennials, those numbers have always been a source of curiosity (and sometimes debate).
They’ve navigated quite a few financial ups and downs — graduating into recessions, weathering rapid changes in the job market and adapting to everything from remote work to side hustles.
Learn More: What Class Do You Actually Belong To? The Income Breakdown Might Shock You
Find Out: Warren Buffett: 10 Things Poor People Waste Money On
So where does that leave us in 2025? What does the average monthly income look like for millennials today, and what does it say about how far they’ve come? Let’s take a closer look at the numbers.
According to Michael Foguth, founder and president of Foguth Financial Group, the average millennial income in 2025 is hovering around the $4,500 to $5,000 per month mark. That said, he noted averages hide the reality of wide disparities.
“Many are still paying off student debt, balancing rent or mortgages in high-cost cities, and shouldering childcare costs,” Foguth pointed out.
That means disposable income often feels much smaller than the topline number suggests.
Read Next: What Is the Estimated Median Income for the Upper-Middle Class in 2025?
The big trend Foguth is seeing is a pivot from aspirational spending to defensive saving.
“Millennials watched inflation eat into their paychecks over the past few years, so they’re focusing more on building emergency funds and contributing to retirement earlier than their parents did,” he shared.
CNBC reported that millennials are actually behind when it comes to retirement. As they look toward 2026, Foguth recommended three priorities:
Automate savings first. Even $300 a month consistently invested can build real wealth over decades.
Pay down variable-rate debt aggressively. With credit card APRs above 20%, eliminating this is equivalent to a guaranteed high return.
Invest in skills as much as in markets. Upskilling or certifications that increase earning power are inflation-proof investments.
“One millennial client I work with redirected a $400 monthly restaurant budget into a Roth IRA. In just three years, they built over $15,000 in retirement savings,” according to Foguth.
That small, consistent change is the kind of habit shift that helps millennials not just survive but thrive in this environment.