2019 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice
Claire Greene and Joanna Stavins
July 2020
This paper describes key results from the 2019 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice (DCPC), the sixth in a series of diary surveys that measure payment behavior through the daily recording of the spending of U.S. consumers.
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JEL classifications: D12, D14, E42
cash, checks, checking accounts, debit cards, credit cards, prepaid cards, electronic payments, payment preferences, Diary of Consumer Payment Choice
https://doi.org/10.29338/rdr2020-04
Interactive Charts
Abstract
In October 2019, almost half of all payments (43 percent) U.S. consumers made were for groceries, gas, and shopping, both in person and online. The distribution was different by value, as 40 percent of payments were for financial services, including mortgages, credit card bills, other loan payments, insurance, investments, and so on. The most commonly used payment instruments were debit cards, cash, and credit cards, which jointly accounted for 80 percent of all payments by number and 37 percent by value. By value, about 40 percent of consumer payments were made via ACH payments, executed either through online banking bill payment or by providing a bank routing number and account number to the payee. The average amount of cash a U.S. consumer held in his or her pocket, purse, or wallet was $60 (the median was $24).
This paper describes key results from the 2019 Diary of Consumer Payment Choice (DCPC), the sixth in a series of diary surveys that measure payment behavior through the daily recording of the spending of U.S. consumers. The DCPC is the only diary survey of U.S. consumer payments with data and results that are available to the public free of charge.
Key Findings
- In October 2019, almost half of all payments (43 percent) U.S. consumers made were for groceries, gas, and shopping, both in person and online.
- By value, 40 percent of payments were for financial services, including mortgages, credit card bills, other loan payments, insurance, investments, and so on.
- The most commonly used payment instruments were debit cards, cash, and credit cards, which jointly accounted for 80 percent of all payments by number and 37 percent by value.
- By value, about 40 percent of consumer payments were made via ACH payments, executed either through online banking bill payment or by providing a bank routing number and account number to the payee.
- The average amount of cash a U.S. consumer held in his or her pocket, purse, or wallet was $60 (the median was $24).
Data Sets
Results
Public Use Data Sets
Individual-level data sets:
Each row of these data sets contains one respondent's observations.Additional Resources
Outside Resources
Send data questions to Senior Survey Specialist Kevin Foster.