Goal Setting and Habit Statistics
The most common goals are practical: money, physical health, exercise, happiness, and healthier eating. The hard part is turning a broad intention into a small plan, a habit cue, and a rhythm for review.
Key stats
The data we used
Each figure below is tied to a cited public source. Our ratings are separate editorial analysis.
31%
Adults setting goals
U.S. adults making resolutions or setting goals for 2025.
YouGov 2025
58%
Adults under 30 setting goals
Adults under 30 planning resolutions or goals.
YouGov 2025
26%
Save more money
Most common 2025 resolution among all U.S. adults.
YouGov 2025
22%
Improve physical health
Share of all U.S. adults naming this goal.
YouGov 2025
22%
Exercise more
Share of all U.S. adults naming this goal.
YouGov 2025
40%
Very likely to keep it
Among people planning a resolution or goal.
YouGov 2025
Methodology
Goal categories with the strongest coaching fit
These rankings prioritize goals that are common, concrete, and easy to translate into a practical action plan.
Money goals
26% resolving to save more money
Money goals are concrete, measurable, and often benefit from prioritization before budgeting.
Physical health goals
22% improving physical health; 20% eating healthier
Health goals often fail when they are too broad. They need one behavior, one cue, and a review point.
Exercise consistency
22% resolving to exercise more
Exercise goals are easier to coach when the first target is consistency, not intensity.
Happiness and emotional wellbeing
22% resolving to be happy
A vague happiness goal needs translation into reflection, gratitude, connection, or energy habits.
Mental health intentions
23% of adults ages 30 to 44 named improving mental health as a common resolution
Self-awareness and planning can help, but this is not a substitute for therapy or clinical care.
Most goals need translation
Save money, get healthier, exercise more, and be happier are too broad until they become a specific next action.
Age matters
YouGov found much higher resolution-setting among adults under 30, which suggests strong demand for guided planning and accountability.
Confidence is not the same as design
Many goal-setters believe they are likely to keep their resolutions. What matters is whether the plan is small enough, specific enough, and reviewed often enough to survive ordinary weeks.
Useful for
Goal setters choosing a first habit
People who want a practical plan
Users comparing habit, goal, and accountability tools
Not for
Guaranteeing behavior change
Replacing medical, financial, or mental health advice
Making a giant life plan before one small action
Sources
Primary data and limitations
We cite the publisher for every statistic and keep our interpretation separate from the original data.
FAQ
Questions about this report
Are New Year's resolutions the same as all goals?
No. They are a useful annual signal, but goals happen year-round.
Why score money goals in a personal coaching report?
Money goals are one of the most common self-improvement goals and often require values, habits, and conversations.
Does CoachGPT guarantee habit change?
No. It helps users design clearer goals, prompts, plans, and review loops.
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