Guide · Net worth
How to track your net worth (and why it matters)
Your income tells you what came in this month. Your net worth tells you whether you're actually getting ahead. It's the single most honest number in personal finance — and it's simpler to track than most people think.
Most people can tell you their salary to the dollar and have no idea what they're worth. That's backwards. A raise feels like progress, but if the extra money flows straight back out again, you're not any better off — you're just busier. Net worth cuts through all of that. It's one number that answers the real question: is my financial life moving in the right direction?
The good news is that tracking it doesn't require a spreadsheet degree or hours of admin. You need two lists and a subtraction. Let's walk through exactly what to include, how to keep the number honest, and — the part most guides skip — how to read it once you've got it.
What net worth actually is
Net worth is everything you own minus everything you owe. In accounting terms, it's your assets minus your liabilities, and the leftover is sometimes called your equity — your genuine, unencumbered stake in your own finances.
The important word is net. A $30,000 car isn't worth $30,000 to you if you still owe $22,000 on the loan; your real stake in it is $8,000. Net worth captures that automatically, because the car sits on the assets side and the loan sits on the liabilities side, and the two are netted against each other. It's why net worth is a truer measure of health than any single account balance — it sees both sides of your financial life at once.
How to calculate your net worth
You only need three steps. Grab your most recent statements, or open whatever tool you use to see your balance sheet, and work through them in order.
Step 1 · List what you own (assets)
Write down everything of real value and what it's worth today. Don't over-think the small stuff — focus on things that would meaningfully move the number:
- Cash — checking, savings, and any physical cash you keep.
- Investments — brokerage accounts, retirement accounts, index funds, anything you could sell.
- Property — your home at a reasonable estimate of current market value, if you own one.
- Vehicles and valuables — a car, motorbike, or valuable equipment, at what it would realistically sell for now, not what you paid.
For anything that loses value over time, use today's resale value rather than the original price. A car you bought for $30,000 three years ago is not a $30,000 asset, and pretending it is just flatters the number without helping you.
Step 2 · List what you owe (liabilities)
Now the other side of the ledger — every debt, at its current outstanding balance:
- Credit cards — the balance you actually carry, not your limit.
- Loans — student loans, personal loans, car finance, buy-now-pay-later balances.
- Mortgage — the amount still outstanding on your home, if you have one.
Step 3 · Subtract
Add up the assets, add up the liabilities, and subtract the second total from the first. That's your net worth. Here's a simple worked example:
| Line | Type | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Checking & savings | Asset | $14,200 |
| Investments | Asset | $38,500 |
| Car (resale value) | Asset | $12,000 |
| Credit card balance | Liability | −$1,900 |
| Car loan outstanding | Liability | −$7,400 |
| Net worth | $55,400 |
That single figure — $55,400 here — is worth far more than any of the lines above it on their own. It's the whole picture, resolved into one honest number.
Why it matters more than your income
Income is a flow; net worth is a level. Two people can earn exactly the same salary and be in completely different financial situations — one quietly building wealth, the other one bad month away from trouble — and only net worth reveals the difference. It's the score that reflects the choices behind the paycheck, not just the paycheck itself.
It also protects you from a subtle trap: lifestyle creep. When your income rises and your spending rises to match, your income statement looks great while your net worth stays flat. Watching net worth instead of income keeps you honest about whether earning more is actually translating into being better off.
A rising income with a flat net worth means the extra money is leaking straight back out. A flat income with a rising net worth means you're genuinely getting ahead. Net worth sees what income can't.
Why you should track the trend, monthly
A net worth figure checked once is just a number. Checked every month, it becomes a story — and the story is where all the value lives. The direction of the line answers questions no snapshot can: are you slowly climbing, holding steady, or quietly sliding backward?
Once a month is the right rhythm. Check it daily and the number lurches around for reasons that don't matter — a bill lands, a market wobbles, payday arrives — and you'll drive yourself mad reading meaning into noise. Take a snapshot on roughly the same day each month, and after a year you'll have twelve data points that reveal the real trajectory. That trend line becomes genuinely motivating: seeing the number climb, month after month, is the quiet proof that your habits are working.
If you want a broader picture of your monthly cash flow to go alongside it, the 50/30/20 budget is a simple way to make sure enough is being directed toward savings in the first place.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Valuing things at what you paid. Use current resale value for cars and depreciating items, or the number is fiction.
- Forgetting a liability. A forgotten buy-now-pay-later balance or an old loan makes the number look better than it is. Include every debt.
- Checking too often. Daily swings are noise. Monthly is signal.
- Avoiding it because it's negative. A negative net worth is a starting line, not a verdict — see the FAQ below.
- Only counting cash. Leaving out investments or property gives you a partial picture. Count both sides in full.
Making it effortless
The honest reason most people don't track their net worth is friction. Pulling every balance together by hand, month after month, gets old fast, and a habit that's tedious is a habit that quietly dies.
This is exactly what a tool should handle for you. Nexiora keeps a full personal balance sheet — your accounts, investments and big assets on one side, your card and loans on the other — and works out the residual for you. It even handles depreciation on things like a car, so the number stays honest without you fiddling with it. Each month it can capture a fresh snapshot, so your net-worth trend builds itself while you get on with your life. And because it's offline-first and never asks for your bank login, your figures stay private to you.