logo
Miamians save less money than other big-city residents. Here's why

Miamians save less money than other big-city residents. Here's why

Miami Herald03-07-2025
Of the U.S.'s 10 largest metropolitan areas, greater Miami residents are among the least able to save their earnings.
The average South Floridian spends roughly 77% of their pre-tax income, according to 2023 data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the agency's most up-to-date statistics. Only the residents of greater Houston and Phoenix are, on average, less able to save than their Miami counterparts.
It figures. Since the pandemic, out-of-state wealth has flooded into Florida, and particularly greater Miami, whose population of millionaires nearly doubled between 2014 and 2024. That influx of money has driven up local prices, especially for housing.
Meanwhile, local workers' wages have lagged, so much so that more than half of Miami households are living paycheck to paycheck. And the money they do have overwhelmingly goes toward housing.
Many of those households that have little ability to squirrel away funds are in vulnerable positions when emergencies strike, noted David Andolfatto, chair of the University of Miami's economics department.
Ultimately, that limits their ability to save for long-term goals, like paying for college or buying a house, and to respond to crises, like a health emergency, job loss or destructive hurricane.
Why so little savings?
The average Miami area household spends $71,000 per year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Roughly 37% of that spending goes toward housing. Across the country's 10 largest metro areas, only New Yorkers spend as much.
Roughly six in 10 people living in metro Miami — which includes Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties — spend more than 30% of their monthly income on housing. A third spend at least half of their earnings on rent. Miami is now the most rent-burdened metropolitan area in the United States.
That's likely a major reason people are so unable to save, said Shari Bower, vice president and regional director at the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, which covers Florida.
'Miami is one of the least affordable places to live in the U.S., both looking at rents and home prices,' she noted.
South Florida's economy is heavily reliant on tourism, added Bower, which means a relatively high share of metro-area jobs are in lower-paying service sectors — another local dynamic that makes it harder for residents to set money aside.
Then there are the demographic considerations. South Florida has a sizable retired population, many of whom live on fixed incomes and are spending any savings they might have, said Andolfatto, the University of Miami economist.
It also has a large immigrant population. Nearly four in 10 people living in greater Miami are foreign born. Many of them likely send a good chunk of their income back to family overseas, said Bower, leaving them less to save.
But generally, she said, greater Miami's relatively low saving rate is most 'likely due to the high cost of living.'
That extends beyond just housing.
Miami's other chart-topping expenditure: transportation. More than a fifth of the average household's budget is dedicated to getting around — the highest share among major U.S. metro areas, tied only with Houston.
Other major expenses as percentages of average household spending include food (12%) and healthcare (6%).
And recent proposed cuts to federal spending, including on food stamps, Medicaid and housing subsidies, could further diminish households' abilities to save.
'I sometimes think people are what we call penny-wise, pound foolish,' quipped Andolfatto, noting that a lack of financial cushion doesn't just affect individuals.
When people are unable to build even modest savings, they're left more exposed to financial shocks, like unemployment or medical emergencies or hurricanes. And when those shocks hit, the costs can spill over onto the broader public — think, the burdens placed on hospital or criminal justice systems when they process homeless people. Or, noted Andolfatto, the security costs that accompany rising crime, when individuals are in desperate situations and do what they need to do to survive.
'Society is going to pay the price, one way or another,' he said.
This story was produced with financial support from supporters including The Green Family Foundation Trust and Ken O'Keefe, in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners. The Miami Herald maintains full editorial control of this work.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The great Northeast exodus — how high taxes are driving away billions
The great Northeast exodus — how high taxes are driving away billions

New York Post

time5 hours ago

  • New York Post

The great Northeast exodus — how high taxes are driving away billions

New York and New Jersey lost $140 billion in income in just one decade. Call it moving van economics — and New York and New Jersey are the losers. A new analysis from my organization, Unleash Prosperity, of the latest census and income tax data finds these two states have lost more residents over the past decade than any other state not named California. Advertisement From 2015-2024, New York has lost 2 million residents. 3 Zohran Mamdani wants to raise taxes by 2 percent on wealthy New Yorkers. Getty Images These are giant population losses from two of America's leading industrial and financial centers throughout the 20th century. State tax havens These New York and New Jersey refugees have mostly relocated to the new powerhouse states like Florida, Texas and Tennessee. These moving vans explains why the Southeast is now, for the first time ever, the economically dominant region in the country. Advertisement Even more problematic for New York and New Jersey is that the movers are taking a lot of personal income and purchasing power with them. From 2012 to 2022, New York has lost $111 billion in income while Jersey is down by more than $31 billion. Because the income is lost forever — except for the rare cases when the exiles move back — these income losses accumulate year after year. 3 Unleash Prosperity Why are so many people leaving the Northeast? Advertisement A myriad of reasons — crime, cost of living, better job opportunities, warmer weather and, yes, to save money on taxes. New York, New Jersey and California are the three biggest losers in the interstate migration sweepstakes, and they just happen to be the states with the highest state-local income tax add-ons. The big winner states like Florida and Texas have no income tax at all. 3 Unleash Prosperity Coincidence? Doubtful. Advertisement There's a warning sign that should be flashing. The place in America with the highest income tax is New York City. Now one of the leading candidates for mayor, Zohran Mamdani, wants to raise the tax on the rich by another 2 percentage points. When will voters realize that you can't tax the New York millionaire after they move to Florida — and choose to pay no income tax at all? Stephen Moore is a co-founder of Unleash Prosperity and a former senior Trump economic adviser.

AI-fueled crypto scams are booming, up 456% — and no one is safe, expert warns
AI-fueled crypto scams are booming, up 456% — and no one is safe, expert warns

New York Post

time2 days ago

  • New York Post

AI-fueled crypto scams are booming, up 456% — and no one is safe, expert warns

Crypto crooks are getting bolder — and now, they sound just like your mom. Global crypto scams soared 456% between May 2024 and April 2025 — becoming increasingly reliant on AI-generated voices, deepfake videos and phony credentials to fleece unsuspecting victims, blockchain intelligence firm TRM Labs' Ari Redbord told The Post after testifying before Congress last Tuesday. 'These scams are highly effective, as the technology feels incredibly real and familiar to the victim,' Redbord said. Advertisement 4 TRM Labs' Ari Redbord, who testified before Congress last week, says scammers are now using AI-generated voices and deepfake credentials to mimic loved ones and steal crypto. Igor Faun – 'We've seen cases where scammers use AI to replicate the voice of a loved one, tricking the victim into transferring money under the guise of an urgent request.' And the threat is exploding — especially in high-density cities like New York, Miami and Los Angeles, he added. In June, New York officials froze $300,000 in stolen cryptocurrency and seized more than 100 scam websites linked to a Vietnam-based ring that targeted Russian-speaking Brooklynites with fake Facebook investment ads. Advertisement Meta shut down over 700 Facebook accounts tied to the scam. Investigators say the group used deepfake BitLicense certificates and moved victims onto encrypted apps like Telegram before draining their wallets. 4 Even crypto pros aren't safe — MoonPay's CEO and CFO were conned into wiring $250,000 to a scammer pretending to be a Trump inauguration insider. Igor Faun – Advertisement Some New Yorkers lost hundreds of thousands of dollars — and it's not just everyday joes getting targeted. Even crypto insiders are falling for it. Florida-based crypto firm MoonPay saw its CEO Ivan Soto-Wright and CFO Mouna Ammari Siala duped into wiring $250,000 in crypto to a scammer posing as Trump inauguration co-chair Steve Witkoff, according to a recent Department of Justice complaint. And that's just the tip of the iceberg. Globally, fraudsters swiped more than $10.7 billion in 2024 through crypto cons — including romance scams, fake trading platforms and 'pig-butchering,' where scammers build fake relationships before draining victims' accounts, Redbord said. Advertisement In the US, Americans filed nearly 150,000 crypto-related fraud complaints in 2024, with losses topping $3.9 billion, according to the FBI. But the real number is likely much higher. 4 A Vietnam-based ring targeted Brooklyn's Russian-speaking community with fake BitLicenses and phony Facebook accounts before vanishing with hundreds of thousands. Igor Faun – 'Only around 15% of victims actually report these crimes,' Redbord said, citing shame, fear and distrust in law enforcement — particularly among older adults and immigrant communities. One of these scammers go-to tools? Crypto ATMs — especially those tucked inside New York delis and convenience stores. Illicit use at these kiosks is more than twice as high as in the broader crypto market, Redbord said. Victims are often directed to scan a QR code and deposit cash, instantly converting it to crypto before the funds disappear. As the scams rage on, Washington is starting to bring order to the Wild West of crypto. 4 Officials say the real number of crypto scam victims is far higher than reported, as shame and fear keep many from coming forward. Igor Faun – House lawmakers wrapped up 'Crypto Week' last Thursday by passing the first-ever comprehensive cryptocurrency legislation — a trio of bills focused on regulating stablecoins, trading platforms and digital asset infrastructure. Advertisement Even so, Redbord advised, common sense is the best defense. 'If something feels too good to be true — especially unsolicited investment advice — it almost always is,' he said. 'Verify the platform. Confirm identities. And when in doubt, report it — whether to IC3, Chainabuse or your local authorities.'

I Asked ChatGPT How Much the Average Middle-Class Retiree Spends Monthly at Age 75: Here's What It Said
I Asked ChatGPT How Much the Average Middle-Class Retiree Spends Monthly at Age 75: Here's What It Said

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

I Asked ChatGPT How Much the Average Middle-Class Retiree Spends Monthly at Age 75: Here's What It Said

Retirement spending statistics are often valuable to consider, whether one is comparing and contrasting said figures with their budgetary situation as retirees or plotting a comfortable path to enjoy one's golden years. Read More: Find Out: ChatGPT is growing in popularity as an artificial intelligence (AI) research tool as well as a personal finance tipster, so it may be valuable to consult its take on exactly how much a middle-class retiree might be expected to spend when they reach age 75. Here's what it said — though, as always, it's best to take generative AI data with a pinch of salt. Using Fed and BLS Data as a Baseline ChatGPT gestured toward data from the Federal Reserve of St. Louis (FRED) and the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) as its primary sources. However, on first glance, while the module did cite BLS table 1300 as an accurate source, it did not correctly identify $53,481 as the mean annual expenditure for Americans aged 75 and older (instead providing a much lower figure of $36,673) in 2022 survey data terms. Once course-corrected, however, ChatGPT provided the following breakdown of expenditures, inflation-adjusted for 2025. Housing: $29,145 Food: $7,249 Healthcare: $9,694 Transportation: $5,390 Entertainment: $2,696 Cash contributions (donations, gifts, alimony or child support): $3,851 Apparel and services: $1,219 Personal insurance: $963 Miscellaneous: $3,977 That amounts to a projected total of $64,184 in annual expenses for middle-class retirees in this age group in 2025. What the future holds is uncertain, and these figures may be less than concrete, but they do provide a general guideline as to what one can expect reality to look like. Discover Next: Key Expense Insights for Retirees Age 75 and Older A few notable pieces of insight that the LLM issued as part of a category breakdown included the fact that housing was, by far, the largest expense — 'even in mortgage-free households' — due to property taxes, maintenance, utilities and insurance. Healthcare did tick upward versus other age groups, logically, but was perhaps less than anticipated due to Medicare coverage. Cash contributions reflected a strong pattern of generosity and gifting within this age cohort, and transportation remained expensive (including gas, insurance and repairs) even though older Americans reported less driving frequency. More From GOBankingRates 3 Luxury SUVs That Will Have Massive Price Drops in Summer 2025 4 Housing Markets That Have Plummeted in Value Over the Past 5 Years Mark Cuban Says Trump's Executive Order To Lower Medication Costs Has a 'Real Shot' -- Here's Why This article originally appeared on I Asked ChatGPT How Much the Average Middle-Class Retiree Spends Monthly at Age 75: Here's What It Said

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store