PRESS RELEASE Visa Research: The Great Wealth Transfer Is Already Reshaping How Americans Spend

07/08/2026

Visa Business and Economic Insights (VBEI) estimates $36 trillion will transfer to younger generations over the next 20 years, with much of the impact already visible in housing, travel and major purchases

  • After accounting for liabilities, removing the top 1 percent of households and subtracting retirement spending, taxes and fees, approximately $36 trillion of boomers’ $93 trillion in assets will transfer to heirs over the next 20 years
  • Nearly 75 percent of inheritance recipients already have a higher net worth, meaning most transferred wealth is likely to be saved or invested rather than spent
  • The $8 trillion expected to be spent creates a targeted lift concentrated mostly in autos, housing, travel and retail
  • The transfer is underway: one in four millennial homeowners received parental down payment assistance, and skip-generation travel is rising as boomers increasingly choose to share their wealth earlier

SAN FRANCISCO — New research from Visa Business and Economic Insights (VBEI) finds that the great wealth transfer is already influencing major financial decisions, from home purchases to travel and long-term saving. The research estimates that approximately $36 trillion will transfer from baby boomers to Gen X and millennial households over the next 20 years.

The findings also show that most of this wealth will flow to households that are already financially secure, making the spending impact more targeted than transformational.

“For businesses in big-ticket sectors like housing and travel, this is not a future trend to watch,” said Wayne Best, chief economist at Visa. “It is already influencing consumer decisions — and shaping where growth will be distributed in the years ahead.”

The transfer is large, but more concentrated than it appears

Baby boomers hold at least $93 trillion in assets, more than three times U.S. GDP. However, VBEI finds that the amount that reaches heirs is reduced significantly once you factor in debt, retirement spending, taxes, and the wealth held at the very top. The result: approximately $36 trillion transferring to Gen X and millennial households over the next 20 years, equivalent to roughly $515,000 per inheriting household.

Most transferred wealth will be saved or invested

Nearly 75 percent of those receiving an inheritance already have a higher net worth than the median household.¹ As a result, $28 trillion of the $36 trillion is likely to be saved or invested. This dynamic represents a significant opportunity for banks, wealth managers, and fintech firms competing for assets from newly inheriting households over the next two decades.

The spending lift is real but targeted to specific categories

The impact will likely show up most in the areas where consumers are already making major financial decisions.

Spending on autos is expected to see a 6.4 percent average annual lift over the next 20 years.²

Overall, the $8 trillion expected to flow into consumer spending will lift annual real spending growth by approximately 0.1 percentage point per year through 2046, a modest boost rather than a major shift in the economy.³

Families are choosing to share wealth earlier

More families are transferring wealth earlier while they can see its impact. One in four millennial homeowners received parental down payment assistance, and 26 percent reported they would not have been able to purchase their current home without it. More than half of individuals expecting to receive an inheritance cite it as critical to their ability to purchase a home, a figure that rises to 69 percent among millennials.

In travel, 28 percent of grandparents have already taken a skip-generation trip with their grandchildren, without the children’s parents, and 35 percent plan to do so within the next three years.

66 percent of boomers say they want to enjoy their wealth or have heirs enjoy it while they are alive, compared to 34 percent who plan to preserve it for after death.⁴

What this means for consumers and businesses

  • For consumers, family financial support may help younger households buy homes, travel and reach major milestones sooner.
  • For businesses, the opportunity will be focused in sectors where inherited wealth is already driving major purchases, especially housing, autos, travel, retail and financial services.
  • For financial institutions, inherited wealth creates an opportunity to support households as they save, invest or purchase property.

The full report is available at The great wealth transfer reality check

Methodology

VBEI’s analysis is based on internal economic modeling, data from the Federal Reserve Board, the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the U.S. Department of Labor, as well as third-party consumer survey research.

FAQ


About Visa Business and Economic Insights (VBEI)

Visa Business and Economic Insights (VBEI) provides data-driven analysis of global economic trends, consumer spending patterns and the evolution of digital commerce, drawing on proprietary VisaNet transaction data, economic modeling and third-party research. The team publishes regular research across macroeconomics, consumer behavior and payments innovation. To subscribe: https://globalclient.visa.com/visaeconomicnews-subscribe

About Visa

Visa (NYSE: V) is a world leader in digital payments, facilitating transactions between consumers, sellers, financial institutions and government entities across more than 200 countries and territories. Our mission is to connect the world through the most innovative, convenient, reliable and secure payments network, enabling individuals, businesses and economies to thrive. We believe that economies that include everyone everywhere, uplift everyone everywhere and see access as foundational to the future of money movement. Learn more at Visa.com.

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Disclaimer

The views, opinions, and/or estimates, as the case may be (“views”), expressed herein are those of the Visa Business and Economic Insights team and do not necessarily reflect those of Visa executive management or other Visa employees and affiliates. This presentation and content, including estimated economic forecasts, statistics, and indexes are intended for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon for operational, marketing, legal, technical, tax, financial or other advice and do not in any way reflect actual or forecasted Visa operational or financial performance. Visa neither makes any warranty or representation as to the completeness or accuracy of the views contained herein, nor assumes any liability or responsibility that may result from reliance on such views. These views are often based on current market conditions and are subject to change without notice.

Media Contact

Raelle Alfaro - press@visa.com

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