Updated
Updated · Cover Magazine · Jun 24
29% of UK Adults Lack Financial Shock Confidence in 2026, Up 6 Points
Updated
Updated · Cover Magazine · Jun 24

29% of UK Adults Lack Financial Shock Confidence in 2026, Up 6 Points

1 articles · Updated · Cover Magazine · Jun 24

Summary

  • 29% of UK adults said they were not confident their household could cope with a financial shock in 2026, up from 23% a year earlier, according to The Exeter's survey of 2,000 consumers.
  • 19% said they felt very confident in their family's financial resilience, down from 22% in 2025, pointing to a broader weakening in perceived financial security.
  • 25-34-year-old workers saw confidence fall to 67% from 75%, while the 45-54 'sandwich generation' was described as the hardest hit among age groups.
  • 15% said day-to-day living costs would be the hardest expense to manage if the worst happened, underscoring how routine household pressures are eroding resilience.

Insights

Why are UK financial markets confident while a third of households fear financial ruin?
With a million youths jobless, what is the true long-term cost of the UK’s generational crisis?
As energy bills and mortgages soar again, is the UK's economic model fundamentally broken?