What is financial anxiety?
Financial anxiety is described as long-term, extreme emotional distress related to money and finances, typically lasting six months or more, Marter said.
Stephanie Smith, a licensed psychologist based in Colorado, agrees. “When I think of financial anxiety, I think of a longer-term struggle,” she said. Although very real for many people, financial anxiety “is not a formal mental health diagnosis,” she noted.
Because it is not identified as a single ailment, it may be difficult to recognize the way financial anxiety impacts our lives.
Yet the links between money worries and mental health are well known. A survey from the American Psychiatric Association showed that 59% of adults said they were anxious about their personal finances.1 Worries about money also affect a range of generations, including Gen Z and millennials.
While it is common for people to experience money concerns periodically, there’s a difference between more ordinary financial stress and financial anxiety. Financial stress refers to money worries that may affect someone occasionally. Financial anxiety, however, is a more severe situation, which can arise due to a number of factors.
“Just like with generalized anxiety, financial anxiety may occur with or without reason,” Smith said. Sometimes people suddenly experience an episode of money anxiety without an apparent cause. Other times financial anxiety can be rooted in a history of some kind of financial hardship.
Money anxiety might be related to a major life change that affects a person’s financial health, such as unemployment or a divorce. Other people with money anxiety may have a “cluster of symptoms that reflect anxiety about money,” Marter said. “Many people who deal with money anxiety might also have an underlying anxiety disorder, such as generalized anxiety disorder or adjustment disorder,” she said.
Unlike money stress, financial anxiety has an impact on a person’s daily life—in their relationships with family and friends, in their work habits, and in their ability to enjoy activities or hobbies, Smith explained.