"Super rich" generally refers to individuals with a net worth of over $30 million (Ultra-High-Net-Worth), often defined by having $50-$100 million or more in investable assets. While income varies, entering the top 1% of U.S. earners usually requires an annual income exceeding $659,000 to $819,000, with top-tier thresholds in states like California and Massachusetts exceeding $1 million.
To keep things simple, let's consider where the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) sets the bar for the top 1% of earners first. According to a 2025 SmartAsset study, you need $731,492 to be in the top 1% of earners nationwide. An annual income anywhere in the vicinity of that figure would certainly make you rich.
In order to be considered wealthy in Canada, you should have a net worth of at least $1 million. That being said, a lot of Canadians who are considered wealthy live a relatively normal life. Most of their net worth is in their primary residence, investments, retirement packages, or even a mix of the three.
Only a small fraction of Americans, around 1.8% of U.S. households, have $2 million or more saved in retirement accounts, according to analyses of Federal Reserve data by organizations like the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI). This puts them in a very elite group, as most people fall far short of this milestone, with far fewer reaching $3 million (around 0.8%).
Rich Is Income.
Being rich is about how much you earn. Being wealthy is about how long you could live exactly as you do without earning another dollar. Someone making $500,000 a year with no savings, no equity, and expensive taste might feel rich — but if they lose the job, they're toast.
Making $500,000 a year is quite rare, placing you in roughly the top 1% (or slightly below, depending on data) of U.S. earners, with estimates suggesting only about 0.8% to 1% of individuals or households achieve this income, though government data can obscure this; it's a significant financial milestone, yet surprisingly, many high earners still feel financially stretched due to lifestyle inflation and high costs.
Defining the Classes
Bottom 25% of Americans: Less than $29,300 net worth. Lower middle class (25th to 50th percentile): $29,300 to $209,000 net worth. Upper middle class (50th to 75th percentile): $209,000 to $714,000 net worth. Upper class (75th to 90th percentile): $714,000 to $2.1 million net worth.
– About 16 percent have $300,000 or more in retirement savings.
9 Signs of Wealth to Look Out For
10 common money habits this CFP says his wealthiest self-made millionaire clients have that normal people could copy
Joining the top 1% requires a net worth of $11.6 million to $13.7 million, a slight dip from 2024 peaks due to market declines but still among the highest in history. For the top 5%, a net worth of $1.17 million to $2.7 million secures your spot, while the top 10% requires between $970,900 and $1.9 million.
Here's a wealth class framework described by Bo Hanson, CFA, CFP® that breaks out 5 groups by net worth: the bottom 25%, the lower middle class, upper middle class, upper class, and the wealthiest 10%.
Of the 54.3% of U.S. households that have any money in retirement accounts, only about 9.3% have $500,000 or more in retirement savings.
10 Signs of Future Wealth
1️⃣ They don't talk about how much money they make. 2️⃣ They drive a modest car (most of the time) 3️⃣ They splurge on rare items that are not outwardly noticeable.
Rich (or wealthy) people tend to have lots of free cash—and/or borrowing power—which they can spend on more goods and services. They can pay their bills easily, afford health care without worry, and often depend on a financially secure future.