Discretionary Income

Discretionary Income

Discretionary income is the amount of an individual's income that is left for spending, investing, or saving after paying taxes and paying for personal necessities, such as food, shelter, and clothing. Discretionary income is what is leftover from disposable income after the income-earner pays for rent/mortgage, transportation, food, utilities, insurance, and other essential costs out of their disposable income. Discretionary income is derived from disposable income, which equals gross income minus taxes. After paying for necessary expenses out of disposable income, the average consumer spent all of their discretionary income and then some, using credit cards and other debt instruments to make additional discretionary purchases beyond what they could afford. Discretionary income and disposable income are terms often used interchangeably, but they refer to different types of income.

Discretionary income is money left over after a person pays their taxes and essential goods and services like housing and food.

What Is Discretionary Income?

Discretionary income is the amount of an individual's income that is left for spending, investing, or saving after paying taxes and paying for personal necessities, such as food, shelter, and clothing.

Discretionary income includes money spent on luxury items, vacations, and nonessential goods and services. Because discretionary income is the first to shrink amid a job loss or pay reduction, businesses that sell discretionary goods tend to suffer the most during economic downturns and recessions.

Discretionary income is money left over after a person pays their taxes and essential goods and services like housing and food.
Nonessential items like vacations and luxury goods are usually paid for with funds from discretionary income.
Disposable income and discretionary income are two different things.
Disposable income is the net income of a person's take-home pay and used to pay for all expenses (both essential and nonessentials).
Discretionary income is used by economists to measure economic health.

Understanding Discretionary Income

Discretionary spending is an important part of a healthy economy. People only spend money on things like travel, movies, and consumer electronics if they have the funds to do so.

Some people use credit cards to purchase discretionary goods, but increasing personal debt is not the same as having a discretionary income.

Discretionary Income vs. Disposable Income

Discretionary income and disposable income are terms often used interchangeably, but they refer to different types of income.

Discretionary income is derived from disposable income, which equals gross income minus taxes.

Disposable income, in other words, is a person's take-home pay used to meet both essential and nonessential expenses. This income is what is left over after taxes and it is the amount of net income available to spend, save, or invest.

Discretionary income is what is leftover from disposable income after the income-earner pays for rent/mortgage, transportation, food, utilities, insurance, and other essential costs out of their disposable income.

For most consumers, discretionary income gets depleted first when a pay cut happens. An example is if a person makes $4,000 per month after taxes and has $2,000 in essential costs, they have $2,000 in monthly discretionary income.

If their paycheck gets cut to $3,000 per month, they can still meet their essential costs but only has $1,000 leftover in discretionary income.

Discretionary Income and the Economy

Discretionary income is an important marker of economic health. Economists use it, along with disposable income, to derive other important economic ratios, such as the marginal propensity to consume (MPC), marginal propensity to save (MPS), and consumer leverage ratios.

In 2005, in the midst of a debt-fueled economic bubble, the U.S. personal savings rate went negative for four consecutive months. After paying for necessary expenses out of disposable income, the average consumer spent all of their discretionary income and then some, using credit cards and other debt instruments to make additional discretionary purchases beyond what they could afford.

Aggregate discretionary income levels for an economy fluctuate over time, typically in line with business cycle activity. When economic output is strong, as measured by the gross domestic product (GDP) or another gross measure, discretionary income levels tend to be high as well. If inflation occurs in the price of life's necessities, then discretionary income falls, assuming that wages and taxes remain relatively constant.

Related terms:

Consumer Discretionary

Consumer discretionary is an economic sector comprising non-essential products that individuals may only purchase when they have excess cash. read more

Discretionary Expense

A discretionary expense is a cost that is not essential for the operation of a home or a business. read more

Disposable Income

Disposable income is the amount of money that a person or household has to spend or save after income taxes are deducted.  read more

Income

Income is money received in return for working, providing a product or service, or investing capital. A pension or a gift is also income. read more

Inflation

Inflation is a decrease in the purchasing power of money, reflected in a general increase in the prices of goods and services in an economy. read more

Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)

Marginal propensity to save (MPS) refers to the proportion of a pay raise that a consumer saves rather than spends on immediate consumption. read more

Marginal Propensity To Consume (MPC)

Marginal propensity to consume represents the proportion of a pay raise that is spent on the consumption of goods and services, as opposed to being saved.  read more

Personal Finance

Personal finance is all about managing your personal budget and how best to invest your money to realize your goals. read more

Savings

Savings is the money left over after subtracting consumer spending from disposable income. Learn about high-yield savings, CDs, and money market accounts.  read more