Find your exact income and net worth percentile across 20 countries: USA, UK, Germany, France, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Australia, Singapore, UAE and more. Based on official 2025 statistical sources: US Census Bureau, Federal Reserve SCF, UBS Global Wealth Report.
Wealth percentile calculations reveal exactly where you stand financially compared to others in your country or around the world. Your percentile tells you what percentage of people earn less than you, providing crucial context beyond a raw salary number. For example, if your income is at the 75th percentile in the United States, you earn more than 75% of Americans.
This calculator uses official income distribution data from 20 countries, including the US Census Bureau CPS ASEC, Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances, UBS Global Wealth Report 2025, OECD earnings databases, and national statistics agencies worldwide. It supports both individual and household comparisons, with age-specific breakdowns that account for the natural wealth accumulation cycle over a lifetime.
Net worth percentile is often more revealing than income percentile because it reflects accumulated wealth rather than just annual earnings. A high earner with significant debt may rank lower in wealth than a moderate earner who has built substantial assets over decades. Understanding both metrics together gives you the most complete picture of your financial standing.
Income and wealth inequality varies dramatically by country. The United States has one of the widest wealth gaps among developed nations, with a Gini coefficient around 42, while countries like Sweden and Canada have more compressed distributions. Emerging economies like Brazil and South Africa show even greater inequality, where the top 1% controls a disproportionate share of national wealth.
Age plays a significant role in wealth accumulation. People aged 50-64 typically have the highest net worth as they approach peak earning years and have had decades to accumulate assets, pay down mortgages, and benefit from investment compounding. Young adults (25-34) often have lower net worth due to student loans, recent home purchases, and fewer years in the workforce. Our age-adjusted multipliers account for these lifecycle differences.
Related tools: Net Worth by Age 2026, Salary Comparator, Wealth Gap Analysis, Billionaire Rankings 2026