Record $60B Credit Card Debt Paydown Before COVID-19 + Results by City – WalletHub Study

6/8/20

U.S. consumers were on track for a record year for debt repayment before the coronavirus pandemic, according to today’s 2020 Credit Card Debt Study from the personal-finance website WalletHub. The study found that consumers paid off a record $60 billion of their roughly $1 trillion in credit card debt during the first quarter of 2020.

With unemployment now at record highs, however, WalletHub projects that U.S. consumers will rack up more than $140 billion throughout the rest of 2020, ending the year with a net increase of $80 billion in credit card debt.

The debt picture is worrisome nationwide, but some areas have bigger payment problems than others. WalletHub compared more than 2,500 cities based on how much residents owe to credit card companies – specifically, how those balances changed in Q1.
Cities with the Biggest Debt PaydownCities with the Smallest Debt Paydown
Ewa Beach, HIMason City, IA
Darien, CTCamden, NJ
Southlake, TXParadise, CA
Westport, CTClarkston, GA
Beverly Hills, CASun City West, AZ
Colleyville, TXInkster, MI
Collegeville, PABarberton, OH
Scarsdale, NYSun City Center, FL
Greenwich, CTWisconsin Rapids, WI
Waipahu, HILaguna Woods, CA


Q&A with WalletHub

How did consumer credit card debt fall when so many people are out of work?

“The latest credit card figures are for the first quarter of 2020, before the coronavirus pandemic began to really wreak havoc in the U.S.,” said Jill Gonzalez, WalletHub analyst. “It’s common for consumers to pay down credit card debt during the first few months of the year, as this is when many people receive annual salary bonuses and tax refunds. This year’s first-quarter paydown was just a lot bigger than normal - at least 50% higher than anything we’ve seen in the past 20 years, which is what makes it so tantalizing in the context of what we all know came after that.”

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