A spending percentile calculator compares your monthly expenses against the U.S. national average using Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey data. Enter what you spend on housing, food, transportation, and other categories to see whether each line item is above or below the typical American household — and where your total spending ranks overall.
Your Monthly Spending
Enter your monthly spending in each category. Leave blank or enter 0 for categories that don't apply.
Rent/mortgage, insurance, HOA
Groceries + dining out
Car payment, gas, transit, insurance
Insurance, copays, prescriptions
Streaming, events, hobbies, subscriptions
Apparel, shoes, accessories
Electric, gas, water, internet, phone
Haircuts, toiletries, gym, beauty
Tuition, books, online courses, childcare
Everything else not listed above
Your Overall Spending Percentile
Category-by-Category Comparison
Based on U.S. BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey averages
Data source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey. Averages represent annual household expenditure divided by 12. Percentile estimates are approximations based on BLS income quintile and distribution data. Individual spending varies significantly by household size, location, and income level. Use these results as a directional benchmark, not a precise measurement.
How to Use the Spending Percentile Calculator
Most people have no idea whether their spending is normal, frugal, or extravagant compared to other Americans. The spending percentile calculator uses Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey data to show you exactly where each category of your budget falls relative to the national average — and what your overall spending percentile is.
Step 1: Enter Your Monthly Spending by Category
The tool includes ten spending categories that cover the full range of typical household expenses. For Housing, include your rent or mortgage payment plus renter's/homeowner's insurance, property taxes, and HOA fees if applicable. For Food & Groceries, add both your grocery spending and any money spent dining out at restaurants — the BLS combines these as "food at home" and "food away from home." Leave any category blank or enter zero if it doesn't apply to you.
Step 2: Review Your Category Comparisons
After clicking "Compare My Spending," each category shows a side-by-side bar comparing your spending to the national average. Green bars indicate you spend below average, while amber bars indicate above-average spending. Each bar shows the exact dollar difference and percentage above or below the mean. This category view helps you spot where your budget diverges most from typical American households.
Step 3: Interpret Your Overall Percentile
The overall spending percentile combines all your categories into a single number. A percentile of 50 means you spend exactly as much as the median American household. A percentile of 80 means you spend more than 80% of households. High percentiles aren't necessarily a problem — they might reflect a higher income, a family with children, or life in an expensive city. Low percentiles could signal frugality or that you simply earn less and have adjusted accordingly.
Understanding the BLS Consumer Expenditure Data
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics runs the Consumer Expenditure Survey annually, interviewing thousands of households about their spending patterns. The survey breaks down spending into dozens of subcategories. This tool uses the major category totals as benchmarks. The national averages reflect all household types — single people, couples, and families — so your personal spending may naturally be higher or lower depending on your household composition.
Using the Results to Optimize Your Budget
Knowing your spending percentile is just the start. If you're in the 90th percentile overall but earn a median income, that's a signal worth investigating. Focus first on the categories where you're most above average relative to what you get from that spending. High entertainment or dining costs are often where small cuts have outsized impact. Housing is usually harder to reduce quickly. Use the category breakdown to have a targeted, data-backed conversation with yourself about where you want to be.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is this spending percentile calculator free?
Yes, the spending percentile calculator is completely free with no signup required. All calculations run locally in your browser — your spending data is never sent to any server or stored anywhere.
Is my spending data private?
Absolutely. Everything runs in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No spending figures or personal data are transmitted to any server. Your financial information stays entirely on your device.
Where does the spending benchmark data come from?
Category averages are based on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey (CE Survey), which tracks how American households allocate their spending across categories like housing, food, transportation, and healthcare. The data reflects national household averages and is approximate.
Why is my total spending percentile different from my category percentiles?
Each category has its own distribution of spending. You might spend below average on housing but above average on dining out — the overall percentile reflects your total monthly outflow compared to the average American household's total expenditure.
Should I include rent or mortgage in housing?
Yes. The housing category should include your rent or mortgage payment, plus any housing-related costs like homeowner's/renter's insurance, property taxes, and HOA fees if paid monthly. This matches how the BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey categorizes housing costs.
What does it mean to be in the 80th spending percentile?
Being in the 80th percentile means you spend more than 80% of American households. Only 20% of households spend more than you. Higher spending percentiles are not inherently bad — they may reflect a higher income, a more expensive city, or specific lifestyle priorities.
Are these averages for single people or households?
The BLS CE Survey data reflects average household expenditure, which includes households of all sizes. Single-person households typically spend less in absolute terms. If you live alone, you may naturally fall below average on categories like food and utilities.
How often is the spending benchmark data updated?
The BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey is conducted annually. The averages in this tool are based on the most recent available survey data. Spending patterns shift gradually year to year, so the benchmarks remain representative even as new data is published.