US consumer credit flatlines in May 2026 as credit card borrowing retreats
The Federal Reserve's latest G.19 report shows total consumer debt holding steady while revolving credit shrinks at its fastest pace in months
The Federal Reserve released its G.19 Consumer Credit report on July 8, 2026, covering data through May 2026. Total consumer credit on a seasonally adjusted basis came in at $5,154.5 billion, essentially unchanged from the prior month.
Credit cards are doing the heavy lifting in reverse
Revolving credit, the category dominated by credit card balances, contracted at an annual rate of 4.7% in May.
Nonrevolving credit told a different story. Auto loans and student loans, the two biggest components of that category, grew at a 1.6% annual rate.
On an unadjusted basis, total consumer credit ticked up to $5,105.2 billion in May from $5,097.1 billion in April. That stands in contrast to the revised $20.7 billion increase recorded in April.
Why a credit report matters for crypto and digital asset markets
The Federal Reserve’s own financial stability documentation has noted a moderation in stablecoin growth alongside declines in broader crypto-asset prices. If consumer balance sheets are tightening at the same time that stablecoin adoption is slowing, the two trends could be reinforcing each other rather than moving independently.
What investors should watch next
The next G.19 release, covering June 2026 data, will be the real test of whether May was a one-month blip or the beginning of a more sustained deceleration in consumer borrowing appetite.