⚡ Quick Answer
Net worth is the total value of everything you own (assets) minus everything you owe (liabilities). Assets: savings, investments, pension value, property equity, and valuable possessions. Liabilities: mortgage balance, loans, credit card balances, and other debts. Net worth = total assets minus total liabilities. Tracking it quarterly or annually is one of the most useful measures of overall financial progress — better than income alone, because it captures what you’ve actually built versus what passes through your hands.
Net worth is the financial metric that tells the most complete story. Income measures what you earn; net worth measures what you’ve built. Two people with the same salary can have vastly different net worths depending on how much they save, invest, and owe. Understanding your own net worth — and watching it trend upward over time — provides one of the clearest pictures of genuine financial progress.
The Formula
Net worth = Total assets − Total liabilities
Simple arithmetic; the insight comes from taking it seriously and tracking it over time.
What to Include as Assets
- Cash and savings: current account balance, easy-access savings, fixed bonds — use current balances
- ISA savings: current market value of all Cash ISAs and Stocks and Shares ISAs
- Pension pots: request transfer values from providers annually — include in the calculation but note these are illiquid until age 57
- Property: current estimated market value, not what you paid. Use a realistic figure — what a willing buyer would pay today, not the peak Zoopla estimate.
- Investments outside ISAs: current market value
- Valuable possessions: only those with genuine, realisable resale value — cars (at realistic resale price), jewellery, collectibles. Exclude everyday possessions.
Be conservative with estimates — property and car values particularly. The goal is a realistic picture, not an optimistic one.
What to Include as Liabilities
- Mortgage outstanding balance — from your most recent statement
- Personal loan balances — outstanding principal
- Credit card balances — total owed, including balances not yet due
- Car finance outstanding balance
- Overdraft balance (if in overdraft)
- Student loan balance — more complex: some exclude this as it may be written off; include if you’re likely to fully repay it based on your expected earnings
Interpreting Your Net Worth
A negative net worth is normal and expected for young adults with student debt, mortgages, and car finance. It’s not a crisis — it’s the starting point for most people’s financial journey. A 25-year-old with a £30,000 mortgage deposit, £15,000 in student loans, and £5,000 in savings has a net worth of approximately £20,000 — negative territory on this calculation before factoring in property, but a perfectly normal and entirely functional position.
What matters most:
- Direction of travel: is net worth growing over time?
- Rate of change: is the growth accelerating as income rises and debts fall?
- Composition: are assets growing faster than liabilities?
Tracking Net Worth Over Time
Annual or quarterly tracking is more meaningful than monthly — changes are larger and less affected by short-term noise. A simple spreadsheet with asset and liability categories updated each quarter provides a clear trend line. Many people find this more motivating than any other financial metric because it shows the cumulative result of all financial decisions made over years.
For building the investment side of your net worth, our article on how to start investing in the UK provides the practical starting point for most people.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I include my pension in my net worth calculation?
Yes — but annotate it clearly as illiquid until age 57. Including it gives the full picture of what you’ve built. Just remember it has different access rules from savings and investments.
Does a high income automatically mean high net worth?
Not at all. High earners who spend everything they earn have low or zero net worth. Net worth measures accumulation, not throughput. This is why it’s a more honest measure of financial health than income alone.
How do I calculate net worth if I own property with a mortgage?
Property equity = property market value minus outstanding mortgage balance. Only equity counts as your net worth, not the gross property value. If your property is worth £280,000 and your mortgage outstanding is £190,000, your property equity is £90,000.
For free net worth tracking resources designed for UK investors, Monevator’s financial independence resources provides excellent tools and context.
