Debt Service Commentary
Editorial analysis of U.S. household debt service, where $600 billion in non-mortgage interest is quietly reshaping household finances.
Debt service ratio at 11.26% in Q3 2025, consumer and mortgage burdens converging
The Convergence of Two Debt Burdens
For decades, mortgage payments dominated the American household debt service picture. That era is ending. As of Q3 2025, the mortgage service ratio stands at 5.89% of disposable income while the consumer service ratio has risen to 5.37%. The gap between the two (once several percentage points wide) has narrowed to just 0.52 percentage points. Non-mortgage interest payments now approach $600 billion annually, rivaling the total cost of mortgage interest for American households.
This convergence represents a structural shift in household finance. Mortgage debt, while larger in absolute terms ($13.7 trillion), carries relatively low average interest rates thanks to the millions of homeowners locked into sub-4% mortgages from 2020–2021. Consumer debt (credit cards at 21%, auto loans at 7–9%, personal loans at 10–15%) generates disproportionate interest costs relative to its size.
The 21% Credit Card Tax
The average credit card interest rate stands at 20.97%, the highest in modern recorded history. For the $1.3 trillion in revolving credit outstanding, this rate functions as a de facto tax on consumption financed by debt. American households collectively pay roughly $270 billion per year in credit card interest alone, money that flows directly from consumer pockets to bank profit statements.
The asymmetry is stark: while savers and bondholders benefit from higher rates through increased interest income (part of the $3.7 trillion investment income story), borrowers face the other side of the same coin. Credit card debt is overwhelmingly concentrated among lower- and middle-income households, meaning the rate environment simultaneously enriches the wealthy and burdens the financially vulnerable.
The Paradox of Aggregate Stability
At 11.26%, the total household debt service ratio is near its historical average and well below the 13.2% peak reached in Q3 2007, just before the financial crisis. On the surface, this suggests households are managing their debt obligations reasonably well. But this aggregate figure conceals enormous variation across the income spectrum.
Upper-income households (those benefiting from low fixed-rate mortgages and minimal credit card balances) may have debt service ratios below 5%. Lower-income households, with higher proportional credit card debt, auto loan burdens, and rent obligations (not captured in the DSR), may face effective debt service ratios of 20% or higher. The aggregate stability masks a distribution where millions of households are under severe financial pressure.
The Mortgage Lock-In Shield
One of the reasons the total debt service ratio remains contained is the extraordinary mortgage rate lock-in effect. Over half of all outstanding mortgages carry rates below 4%, locked in during the historically low-rate environment of 2020–2021. These homeowners are effectively insulated from the Fed's rate increases. Their monthly mortgage payments have not changed, even as new borrowers face 30-year rates near 7%.
This creates a two-tier housing finance system. Existing homeowners with locked-in rates experience minimal debt service pressure. New buyers and those who must refinance face significantly higher costs. The mortgage lock-in effect is, in aggregate, suppressing the debt service ratio by perhaps 1–2 percentage points below where it would be if all mortgages reflected current market rates.
Stress on Lower-Income Households
The debt service picture is most concerning for the bottom 40% of households by income. These households are more likely to carry credit card balances at 21% interest, more likely to have auto loans with above-average rates, and more likely to have thin savings cushions. For these families, the debt service ratio is not an abstract statistic, it determines whether they can afford groceries, medical care, and rent after making their minimum debt payments.
The debt service data tells a story of hidden fragility beneath apparent stability. The aggregate numbers look manageable precisely because the benefits of low mortgage rates are concentrated among wealthier households who are least affected by the costs of high consumer rates. The households bearing the brunt of the current rate environment are the ones least visible in the aggregate statistics, and the ones least able to absorb the strain.