Financial marketing tends to behave as if consumers are constantly thinking about their bank. They’re not. For most people, their primary financial institution is invisible — a background service they interact with briefly and think about almost never.
Until something changes.
Our research identified six life events that reliably trigger active financial shopping. These are the moments when consumers move from passive awareness to active evaluation — and when your institution either gets considered or doesn’t.
The Six Triggers
34%
Buying a new car
The most common trigger nationally, with Gen Z at 44% and Millennials at 38%. Auto loan visibility matters enormously at this moment.
30%
Moving or relocating
One of the clearest windows for new account acquisition. When someone moves, they often reassess every service provider in their lives.
24%
Planning for retirement
The dominant trigger for Baby Boomers at 48%, making retirement content and products central to any Boomer strategy.
23%
Buying a home or undertaking major renovations
A high-stakes financial moment with long-term relationship implications.
23%
Pursuing higher education
Especially relevant for Gen Z at 38%, and for the parents who help finance it.
21%
Marriage or divorce (21% / 10%)
Life transitions that almost always include a financial reorganization.
The Pre-Trigger Imperative
Here’s what the data makes unmistakably clear: by the time a consumer is actively shopping for a financial product, the shortlist is already set. The brands they consider are the ones they already know. The institutions that were present and credible in the months and years before the trigger arrived.
This is why always-on awareness — in digital channels, in local news, in search, in social, in community sponsorships — isn’t a brand luxury. It’s a prerequisite for being considered at all.
You can’t manufacture a life event. But you can make absolutely certain you’re on the shortlist when one arrives.
Want the full picture?
The 2026 American Financial Consumer report covers every stage of the customer journey, from first brand impression through referral, with data broken down by generation, income, and geography.
And when you’re done reading, let us show you how your institution looks through the eyes of AI.
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