| Mnemonic | XCCLNRVTM.IUSA | |
|---|---|---|
| Unit | Bil. USD, NSA | |
| Adjustments |
Not Seasonally Adjusted
, Seasonally Adjusted |
|
| Monthly | 0.22 % | |
| Data | Apr 2026 | 3,804 |
| Mar 2026 | 3,796 | |
| Source | U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB) |
| Release | G.19 Consumer Credit |
| Frequency | Monthly |
| Start Date | 1/31/1943 |
| End Date | 4/30/2026 |
For the U.S., the FRB "G.19 Consumer Credit" statistical release is a monthly sample estimate of loans to households, for financing consumer purchases of goods and services, for refinancing existing consumer debt, but not mortgages. Monthly since 1943.
There are subsets for "owned" vs. "securitized" balances, a distinction which is less important since FASB 166/167 in 2010. Data Buffet carries only the "owned" subset.
Noninstallment loans are reported in the "other" category and represent roughly 6% of total consumer credit (installment plus noninstallment). The dataset excludes loans secured by real estate, i.e., mortgages.
The series for consumer credit outstanding and its components may contain breaks that result from discontinuities in source data. Percent changes are adjusted to exclude the effect of such breaks. In addition percent changes are at a simple annual rate and are calculated from unrounded data.
Secured and unsecured loans are included except those secured with real estate. Securitized consumer loans, loans made by finance companies, banks, and retailers that are sold, as securities are included.
Figures are consumer credit outstanding at the end of the month.
The G.19 report includes levels, growth rate of levels, and flows. The levels contain definitional breaks (i.e., numeric discontinuities), the rates are adjusted to exclude the effect of the breaks, but the flows exclude the breaks.
The G.19 differentiates between "on-book loan balances" and "off-book securitized loan balances," but accounting rule FASB 166/167 required the majority of securitized assets to be reported on-book, which reduced the latter subset to near-zero. For example, in the following triplet, "securitized" was 7.2% of "total" in 2009, but only 0.2% in 2021.
Data Buffet carries only the "owned" subset (in this example, as XCCLNRVDM.IUSA). As of June 2020, the G.19 monthly release tabulates the "total," so corresponding line items will not match exactly.
Monthly data on consumer installment credit are based on monthly surveys of a sample of commercial banks conducted by the Federal Reserve Board, monthly surveys of consumer finance companies, including auto finance companies, monthly surveys of credit unions, and monthly surveys of retail sales. Benchmark data are available annually for commercial banks, savings and loans associations, mutual savings banks, and retailers, and every five years for finance companies.
There are seven types of major holder.
The main categories of consumer credit are:
Other definitions:
The G.19 contains monthly data, with a two-month lag. The human-readable statistical report is released on the fifth business day of each month at 3:00 p.m. ET. The bulk data file may be noticeably delayed.
The "terms of credit" series (IRCCPER24M.IUSA, IRCCARDM.IUSA, IRCCARDIM.IUSA, IRCCAUT48M.IUSA) are reported quarterly, in February, April, July and November. The other eight months of the year, their values are ND. They were suspended in 2011, because their "statistical foundation ... has deteriorated," and revived in 2015.
Seven "terms of automobile credit" series (IRNCARFM.IUSA, NLOANF.IUSA, etc.) (and the corresponding Moody's Analytics seasonally adjusted supplements) went on hiatus since early 2011, for the FRB improves their statistical basis. They were revived in 2015, but redefined.
In 2025, "nonfinancial business sector" was dropped from the list of major holders.
(Last updated April 2014.)
We compute two supplements that were originated by the Conference Board Business Cycle Indicators (BCI). They are:
A ratio of credit outstanding (FRB G.19) to annualized personal income (BEA NIPA):
CCYPM.IUSA = 100*(1000*CCLALLTM.IUSA/YPM.IUSA)
And the month-over-month level change in total owned and securitized consumer credit (G.19):
CCCHG.IUSA = 12*diff(CCLALLTM.IUSA)
For "terms of credit, on new car loans, from finance companies" monthly, we seasonally adjust the amount financed and maturity items. We do not adjust the interest rate.
The native reporting is every third month (i.e., with gaps), which is analytically inconvenient (for Data Buffet's chart tool, etc.). In July 2019 we constructed NSA quarterly versions, without gaps. In March 2024 we constructed SA counterparts.
The official tabulation includes annual and quarterly versions of the monthly fundamentals, but these are not reported via the DDP bulk data facility. The "terms of credit" subset cannot be reconstituted using Data Buffet's frequency conversion tools, so we produce quarterly counterparts to match the tabulation.
At December 2005/January 2006 and November 2010/December 2010 there are breaks in the data due to redefinitions. The G.19 reports break-adjusted flows, but not break-adjusted levels; hence, in 2013 Moody's Analytics constructed supplements to facilitate long-term analysis. The method is simple and is explained in the G.19 documentation (on page "About" under "Generating Monthly Estimates: Seasonally Adjusted Annual Growth Rates and Total Consumer Credit").
Inputs:
Outputs:
Method:
We amended our method in June 2025 to compensate for a break at December 2024.
This applies to six triads of series:
| Indicator | Level as reported | Flow BA | Level BA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total credit NSA | XCCLREVTM.IUSA | XCCUREVTM.IUSA | XCCLREVTBM.IUSA |
| Revolving credit NSA | XCCLREVTM.IUSA | XCCUREVTM.IUSA | XCCLREVTBM.IUSA |
| Non-revolving credit NSA | XCCLNRVTM.IUSA | XCCUNRVTM.IUSA | XCCLNRVTBM.IUSA |
| Total credit SA | CCLALLTM.IUSA | CCUALLTM.IUSA | CCLALLTBM.IUSA |
| Revolving credit SA | CCLREVTM.IUSA | CCUREVTM.IUSA | CCLREVTBM.IUSA |
| Non-revolving credit SA | CCLNRVTM.IUSA | CCUNRVTM.IUSA | CCLNRVTBM.IUSA |
The data are revised for the previous month.
The data are revised annually (in June) as part of periodic benchmarking.
Revisions to the Moody's Analytics break-adjusted levels typically apply over the entire time series.
The benchmark revisions released in June 1996 saw the measure of consumer credit broadened to include noninstallment consumer credit. Previously, the data only represented installment loans.
The shift of consumer credit from pools of securitized assets to other categories is largely due to financial institutions' implementation of the FAS 166/167 accounting rules.
There was a benchmark revision in September 2012 that affected most series from December 2010. The "terms of credit" series were unchanged.
On 7 April 2016 there were revisions "extending back to January 2006 that are primarily caused by updated seasonal factors and the benchmarking of estimates to data released by the Department of Education and the U.S. Census Bureau" (citation).
At the source:
There are seven types of major holder, but only two of these (commercial banks and savings institutions) are measured by the FDIC. Consequently, the "credit cards" portion of the FDIC's quarterly "charge-off rates" dataset is not comparable with the G.19.