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Just had someone ask me if making six figures still means you've "made it" in 2025, and honestly? The answer is way more complicated than it used to be.
Let me break down where $100K actually puts you. If you're an individual earner pulling in that amount, you're definitely above the median (around $53K), but here's the thing - the top 1% starts at roughly $450K. So you're doing better than most people, but nowhere near rich territory.
Now, what percentage of men make over 100k? The data shows it's a meaningful chunk, but still a minority. When you look at household income though, the picture shifts. About 42.8% of U.S. households hit that $100K mark or higher, which puts a $100K household income around the 57th percentile - so you're outearning roughly 57% of households but not by as much as you'd think.
Here's what actually matters though: Pew Research puts middle-income households at $56,600 to $169,800 (in 2022 dollars), and $100K slots you right in the middle of that range. You're comfortable, sure, but you're not upper class.
But - and this is huge - everything changes based on where you live. In San Francisco or New York, $100K gets eaten up by rent and childcare. In the midwest or rural areas? That's a solid upper-middle-class life. Same with household size. A single person earning $100K lives completely different from a family of four with the same income.
The real takeaway: Six figures used to signal you'd made it. Now it just means you're doing better than average - comfortable in most places, but still dealing with cost-of-living pressure. You're in that weird middle zone where you're ahead of most people but not in the elite tier. The math has changed.