Private Debt to GDP in the United States decreased to 142 percent in 2024 from 147.50 percent in 2023. Private Debt to GDP in the United States averaged 131.72 percent from 1995 until 2024, reaching an all time high of 158.30 percent in 2020 and a record low of 100.50 percent in 1997. source: OECD

Private Debt to GDP in the United States is expected to reach 138.00 percent by the end of 2025, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. In the long-term, the United States Private Debt to GDP is projected to trend around 136.00 percent in 2026 and 135.00 percent in 2027, according to our econometric models.



Related Last Previous Unit Reference
Banks Balance Sheet 24755.70 24807.20 USD Billion Feb 2026
Fed Balance Sheet 6622382.00 6605909.00 USD Million Feb 2026
Effective Federal Funds Rate 3.64 3.64 percent Feb 2026
Fed Capital Account Surplus 6785.00 6785.00 USD Million Feb 2026
Foreign Bond Investment 85600.00 -60100.00 USD Million Nov 2025
Foreign Exchange Reserves 38641.00 38330.00 USD Million Dec 2025
Fed Interest Rate 3.75 3.75 percent Jan 2026
Loans to Private Sector 2709.74 2698.59 USD Billion Dec 2025
Money Supply M0 5373700.00 5302100.00 USD Million Dec 2025
Money Supply M1 19111.80 19025.40 USD Billion Dec 2025
Money Supply M2 22411.00 22322.10 USD Billion Dec 2025
Private Debt to GDP 142.00 147.50 percent Dec 2024
Proxy Funds Rate 3.56 3.67 percent Jan 2026
Secured Overnight Financing Rate 3.65 3.65 percent Feb 2026


United States Private Debt to GDP
Private sector debt to GDP measures the indebtedness of both sectors, non-financial corporations and households and non-profit institutions serving households, as a percentage of GDP.
Actual Previous Highest Lowest Dates Unit Frequency
142.00 147.50 158.30 100.50 1995 - 2024 percent Yearly