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Glossary

Net Worth

Everything you own minus everything you owe — the single number that tracks overall financial progress.

Net worth is the one-line balance sheet of a household: everything you own (assets) minus everything you owe (liabilities). It’s the only common financial metric that integrates every decision you’ve made — earning, spending, borrowing, investing — into a single trackable number.

Assets count at realistic current values: home market value, retirement and brokerage accounts, cash, vehicles. Liabilities count at today’s payoff balances: mortgage, loans, cards. The difference can absolutely be negative — common early in careers, especially with student debt — and a negative reading is a position, not a verdict. What matters is the trajectory: net worth measured quarterly, plotted over years.

A useful refinement is separating liquid from illiquid wealth. Home equity often dominates household net worth but can’t pay a grocery bill; many planners track “investable net worth” (excluding the primary residence) alongside the headline number. Composition matters as much as size — see liquidity.

Net worth also anchors bigger frameworks: the FIRE movement defines financial independence as net invested assets crossing 25× annual spending. Build your itemized statement in the net worth calculator — ten minutes, repeated quarterly, produces the most motivating chart in personal finance.

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