FREE CALCULATOR

Your Free Financial Health Score

Enter 5 numbers. Get a score from 0–100 with a personalized breakdown and action plan. Takes 60 seconds. No account required.

Enter your numbers

Don't know your score? Pick your best estimate.
After taxes and deductions.
Credit cards + loans + student debt + auto loans. Exclude mortgage.
Checking + savings + emergency fund. Exclude retirement accounts.
Rent/mortgage + utilities + food + transportation + minimum debt payments.

Free · No account · No credit pull · Your data stays in your browser

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How the Score Is Calculated

The WiseIQ Financial Health Score is a composite score from 0 to 100 based on five factors, each weighted by its impact on long-term financial stability. The methodology is aligned with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau's Financial Well-Being Scale and academic research on household financial health.

Factor Weight What It Measures
Credit Score25%Access to credit, borrowing cost, financial track record
Debt-to-Income Ratio25%Monthly debt burden relative to income — key lender metric
Emergency Fund Coverage25%Months of expenses covered by savings — financial resilience
Savings Rate15%Monthly surplus after expenses — ability to build wealth
Debt Load10%Total debt relative to annual income — absolute debt burden

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good financial health score?

A score of 70 or above is considered good. Scores of 85+ are excellent. Most Americans score between 45 and 65, with the biggest drag coming from high debt-to-income ratios and low emergency fund balances.

Is my data stored or shared?

No. All calculations happen entirely in your browser. We never transmit, store, or share the numbers you enter. No account is required and no cookies are set for this calculator.

How is this different from a credit score?

A credit score measures your creditworthiness — how likely you are to repay debt. The Financial Health Score measures your overall financial stability, including savings, income, and debt load. You can have a high credit score but a low financial health score if you carry a lot of debt relative to your income.

Sources: CFPB Financial Well-Being Scale (consumerfinance.gov) · Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances · myFICO (myfico.com) · Last reviewed: April 2026