More Americans Are Breaking into the Upper Middle Class

13 points
1/21/1970
18 hours ago
by lxm

Comments


georgeburdell

I can’t read the article, but I hope their definition of upper middle class adjusts for the steep inflation in housing. If my family knew how much I made, approximately the top 1% of incomes, they’d think I live a fantastically luxurious lifestyle. In reality, I live in the same kind of 3 bed 2 bath house I grew up because houses are now 5x more expensive.

17 hours ago

bayarearefugee

> I can’t read the article

https://archive.ph/2026.04.05-025428/https://www.wsj.com/eco...

"Upper middle class" for a family is $133k according to them.

Things look very rosy for our economy as long as you're using 1963 numbers as your poverty baseline and extrapolating from there.

15 hours ago

laughing_man

$133k is upper middle class. It just doesn't feel like upper middle class if you're living in NYC or San Francisco.

13 hours ago

pharaohgeek

It doesn't feel like it if you're living in MOST places. I bought my first house 6 months after graduating from college (2000). It cost me roughly 3x my salary at the time. I know what I pay new grads right now, and it's way more than I made back then. There's no way they can afford a house like that at 3x their salary. It's closer to 4-5x, and we are nowhere near as expensive in this area as NYC, SF, DC, etc.

8 hours ago

bayarearefugee

133k for a family of 3 is effectively poverty wages in NYC or SF.

In less HCOL areas it is getting by, but possibly never owning a house.

Hardly the upper middle class lifestyle one imagines being lived by doctors, lawyers, etc in times past.

7 hours ago

black_13

[dead]

15 hours ago