WASHINGTON, D.C. — The percentage of U.S. adults who anticipate high-quality lives in five years declined to 59.2% in 2025, the lowest level since measurement began nearly two decades ago. Since 2020, future life ratings have fallen a total of 9.1 percentage points, projecting to an estimated 24.5 million fewer people who are optimistic about the future now versus then. Most of that decline occurred between 2021 and 2023, but the ratings dropped 3.5 points between 2024 and 2025.

Americans’ ratings of their current lives have also declined since rebounding in 2021 but not as steeply as their future life ratings. And current life ratings are not at a low point; that occurred in 2020, during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

These results are a part of theGallup National Health and Well-Being Index. The 2025 results are based on data collected over four quarterly measurement periods, totaling 22,125 interviews with U.S. adults who are part of theGallup Panel, a probability-based panel encompassing all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

To measure current as well as future life satisfaction, respondents were asked:

Black adults — historically the most likely of the United States’ three major race/ethnicity groups to havehigh future optimism— had the greatest erosion in optimism between 2021 and 2024. But Hispanic adults showed a larger drop than Black adults did in the past year.

All three major political identity groups dropped about five percentage points in future life optimism from 2021 to 2024. However, the groups showed differing patterns of change in 2025, the first year of President Donald Trump’s second administration. Democrats tumbled another 7.6 points in 2025, while independents edged down another 1.5 points and Republicans remained essentially unchanged.

It is common for life ratings to swing negatively or positively among political partisans whenparty control of the White House changes. Between 2020 and 2021, Democrats’ optimism grew by 4.4 points, while Republicans’ dropped by 5.9, mostly canceling each other out across the full population.

As of Quarter 4, 2025, the percentage of American adults who rate both their current and future lives high enough to be classified as “thriving” dropped to 48.0%, down over 11 points from the 59.2% high measured in June 2021, six months after the first public rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine. The latest estimate is the sixth lowest of 176 (primarily monthly or quarterly) measurement periods dating to January 2008. The five measurements that were lower were during either the Great Recession (October, November and December 2008) or the early stages of the pandemic (in the first and the last half of April 2020).

For its Life Evaluation Index, Gallup classifies respondents as "thriving," "struggling" or "suffering," according to how they rate their currentandfuture lives on a ladder scale with steps numbered from zero to 10, based on theCantril Self-Anchoring Striving Scale. Those who rate their current life a 7 or higher and their anticipated life in five years an 8 or higher are classified as thriving. While, as noted above, both the current life and future life ratings have declined since 2021, the future life metric has had an outsized influence over eroding thriving rates because it has declined much more substantially. This contrasts significantly with 2020, when the thriving rate plunged below 50%, ultimately tying its all-time low of 46.4% — a result of amajor drop in current life satisfactionamid a modest improvement in future life satisfaction, which culminated in a near-record high for the latter that year.

The drop in future life ratings since 2021 likely indicates that multiple mechanisms are at work. For example, the steep drop from 2021 to 2023 — even as the pandemic was gradually receding —closely coincideswith annual inflation rates that peaked at 7.0% in 2021 and eased only slightly to 6.5% in 2022, creating significant affordability challenges for U.S. consumers that continue to this day.

Source: Drudge Report