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Just found out the average American spends around 3.3 million dollars over their lifetime and honestly, the breakdown is wild. Like, I knew housing would be expensive, but seeing it account for nearly half of that total really puts things in perspective.
So here's how much money does a person spend in a lifetime according to this study. Housing dominates at about 1.5 million when you factor in changing residences every 15 years. Then cars eat up another 470k because most people go through roughly 10 vehicles in their lives. After that it's stuff like raising kids (467k), health insurance (290k), and retirement savings (195k). The rest gets split between renovations, vacations, furniture, education and weddings.
What's interesting is the difference between one-time purchases and stuff you buy repeatedly. Those milestone moments like buying a house, getting a car, paying for college and weddings hit hardest. But vacations are the most frequent major expense - people average 59 trips over their lifetime totaling 118k combined.
When you break it down, how much money does a person spend in a lifetime really depends on their choices around housing and vehicles since those two categories alone make up more than half the total. It's kind of a reality check for anyone thinking about their long-term financial planning. Makes you wonder where your own spending actually goes.