U.S. consumers earned more income, saved more money, and spent less in April, new U.S. government data show.
The May reading represented the largest month-over-month increase since May 2021 and far exceeded the consensus estimate of 0.3 percent.
The sizable jump was fueled by a 2.8 percent surge in personal current transfer receipts—money not tied to wages or active work, such as government social benefits—up from a 1.1 percent increase in the previous month.
Employee compensation rose by 0.5 percent, led by equal gains in private wages and salaries. In addition, the report revealed that wages and salaries in goods-producing industries declined by $3.1 billion, while wages and salaries in services-producing sectors soared by $53.1 billion.
Rental income remained flat, and personal income receipts from assets decreased by 0.4 percent.
Disposable personal income also swelled by 0.8 percent, or $189.4 billion. The personal saving rate reached a one-year high of 4.9 percent.
At a White House event, President Donald Trump, alongside Elon Musk, called the data “rather extraordinary.”
The better-than-expected figures might be only temporary, according to Yelena Shulyatyeva, a senior U.S. economist at The Conference Board.
The sharp jump likely reflected a one-off increase in Social Security benefits and higher compensation levels for trade and transportation workers, she said.
“We expect wages and salaries growth to slow as trade volumes subside,” Shulyatyeva wrote.
Consumers, meanwhile, curtailed their spending in May after front-running the president’s tariffs in March.
Personal spending edged up by 0.2 percent, down from a 0.7 percent rise in March. This was in line with market estimates.
Goods spending dipped by 0.1 percent. Conversely, spending on services climbed by 0.4 percent.
Looking ahead, Foran estimates that consumer spending will grow by 1.8 percent in the current quarter “as the economy continues to adapt to a higher cost environment.”
For an economy that is two-thirds consumption, improved personal spending could support more substantial growth this year. However, it may depend on how consumers perceive current or future economic conditions.
After months of a deteriorating outlook for the broader economy, sentiment improved in May.

Recent data also suggest that the U.S. economy could stage a rebound in the second quarter after contracting by 0.2 percent in the first three months of 2025.
“And it will only get better. The tariffs are so important,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office.
The president announced, heading into the weekend, that he will double the tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50 percent, effective June 4.
“So much for being Mr. Nice Guy!” he wrote on Truth Social.
The president and other senior administration officials have not shared specifics as to how the Chinese regime has failed to comply with the mid-May deal.