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Household income in the United States

Household income is an economic standard that can be applied to one household, or aggregated across a large group such as a county, city, or the whole country. It is commonly used by the United States government and private institutions to describe a household's economic status or to track economic trends in the US.

Median US household income through 2019
U.S. real median household income reached $63,688 in January 2019, an increase of $171 or 0.3% over one month (December 2018) .[1]

A key measure of household income is the median income, at which half of households have income above that level and half below. The U.S. Census Bureau reports two median household income estimates based on data from two surveys: the Current Population Survey (CPS) and the American Community Survey (ACS). The CPS is the recommended source for national-level estimates, whereas the ACS gives estimates for many geographic levels.[2]: 19 [3]: 10  According to the CPS, the median household income was $63,179 in 2018.[2][4] According to the ACS, the U.S. median household income in 2018 was $61,937.[3] Estimates for previous years are given in terms of real income, which have been adjusted for changes to the price of goods and services.

The distribution of U.S. household income has become more unequal since around 1980, with the income share received by the top 1% trending upward from around 10% or less over the 1953–1981 period to over 20% by 2007.[5] After falling somewhat due to the Great Recession in 2008 and 2009, inequality rose again during the economic recovery, a typical pattern historically.[6][7]

Definition

A household's income can be calculated in various ways but the US Census as of 2009 measured it in the following manner: the income of every resident of that house that is over the age of 15, including pre-tax wages and salaries, along with any pre-tax personal business, investment, or other recurring sources of income, as well as any kind of governmental entitlement such as unemployment insurance, social security, disability payments or child support payments received.[8]

The residents of the household do not have to be related to the head of the household for their earnings to be considered part of the household's income.[9] As households tend to share a similar economic context, the use of household income remains among the most widely accepted measures of income. That the size of a household is not commonly taken into account in such measures may distort any analysis of fluctuations within or among the household income categories, and may render direct comparisons between quintiles difficult or even impossible.[10] The US Census does not include noncash benefits such as health benefits.[11]

Recent trends

 
U.S. economic growth is not translating into higher median family incomes. Real GDP per household has typically increased since the year 2000, while real median income per household was below 1999 levels until 2016, indicating a trend of greater income inequality.[12]
 
Total compensation's share of GDP has declined by 4.5 percentage points from 1970 to 2016. This implies that the share attributed to capital increased in that period.
 
U.S. real wages (i.e. production) for ordinary (i.e. non-supervisory) workers remain slightly below their 1970s peak.[13]

The Current Population Survey of the U.S. Census Bureau reported in September 2017 that real median household income was $59,039 in 2016, exceeding any previous year. This was the fourth consecutive year with a statistically significant increase by their measure.[14]

Changes in median income reflect several trends: the aging of the population, changing patterns in work and schooling, and the evolving makeup of the American family, as well as long- and short-term trends in the economy itself. For instance, the retirement of the Baby Boom generation should push down overall median income, as more persons enter lower-income retirement. However, analysis of different working age groups indicate a similar pattern of stagnating median income as well.[15]

Journalist Annie Lowrey wrote in September 2014: "The root causes [of wage stagnation] include technological change, the decline of labor unions, and globalization, economists think, though they disagree sharply on how much to weight each factor. But foreign-produced goods became sharply cheaper, meaning imports climbed and production moved overseas. And computers took over for humans in many manufacturing, clerical, and administrative tasks, eroding middle-class jobs growth and suppressing wages."[16]

Another line of analysis, known as "total compensation," presents a more complete picture of real wages. The Kaiser Family Foundation conducted a study in 2013 which shows that employer contributions to employee healthcare costs went up 78% from 2003 to 2013.[17] The marketplace has made a trade-off: expanding benefits packages vs. increasing wages.

Measured relative to GDP, total compensation and its component wages and salaries have been declining since 1970. This indicates a shift in income from labor (persons who derive income from hourly wages and salaries) to capital (persons who derive income via ownership of businesses, land and assets). This trend is common across the developed world, due in part to globalization.[18] Wages and salaries have fallen from approximately 51% GDP in 1970 to 43% GDP in 2013. Total compensation has fallen from approximately 58% GDP in 1970 to 53% GDP in 2013.[citation needed]

However, as indicated by the charts below, household income has still increased significantly since the late 1970s and early 80s in real terms, partly due to higher individual median wages, and partly due to increased employment of women.

According to the CBO, between 1979 and 2011, gross median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose from $59,400 to $75,200, or 26.5%.[19] However, once adjusted for household size and looking at taxes from an after-tax perspective, real median household income grew 46%, representing significant growth.[20]

The following table summarizes real median household income at key recent milestones:

Variable 1999 Previous Record 2007 Pre-Crisis Peak 2012 Post-Crisis Trough 2016 Previous Record 2017 Previous Record 2018 Record
Real median household income[21] $61,526 $60,985 $55,900 $61,779 $62,626 $63,179

Uses

Use of individual household income: The government and organizations may look at one particular household's income to decide if a person is eligible for certain programs, such as nutrition assistance [22] or need-based financial aid,[23] among many others.

Use at the aggregate level: Summaries of household incomes across groups of people – often the entire country – are also studied as part of economic trends like standard of living and distribution of income and wealth. Household income as an economic measure can be represented as a median, a mean, a distribution, and other ways. Household income can be studied across time, region, education level, race/ethnicity, and many other dimensions. As an indicator of economic trends, it may be studied along with related economic measures such as disposable income, debt, household net worth (which includes debt and investments, durable goods like cars and houses), wealth, and employment statistics.

Median inflation-adjusted ("real") household income

Median inflation-adjusted ("real") household income generally increases and decreases with the business cycle, declining in each year during the periods 1979 through 1983, 1990 through 1993, 2000 through 2004 and 2008 through 2012, while rising in each of the intervening years.[19] Extreme poverty in the United States, meaning households living on less than $2 per person per day before government benefits, more than doubled in absolute terms from 636,000 to 1.46 million households (including 2.8 million children) between 1996 and 2011, with most of this increase occurring between late 2008 and early 2011.[24]

 
Median household income, by county, as of 2017.

CBO income growth study

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office conducted a study analyzing household income throughout the income distribution, by combining the Census and IRS income data sources. Unlike the Census measure of household income, the CBO showed income before and after taxes, and by also taking into account household size.[25] Also, the CBO definition of income is much broader, and includes in kind transfers as well as all monetary transfers from the government.[25] The Census' official definition of money income excludes food stamps and the EITC, for example, while CBO includes it.

Between 1979 and 2011, gross median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose from $59,400 to $75,200, or 26.5%. This compares with the Census' growth of 10%.[19] However, once adjusted for household size and looking at taxes from an after-tax perspective, real median household income grew 46%, representing significant growth.[20]

While median gross household income showed much stronger growth than depicted by the Census, inequality was shown to still have increased. The top 10% saw gross household income grow by 78%, versus 26.5% for the median. The bottom 10%, using the same measure, saw higher growth than the median (40%).[20]

 
This graph shows the income since 1970 of different racial and ethnic groups in the United States (in 2014 dollars).[26]

Since 1980, U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) per capita has increased 67%,[27] while median household income has only increased by 15%. Median household income is a politically sensitive indicator. Voters can be critical of their government if they perceive that their cost of living is rising faster than their income.

The early-2000s recession began with the bursting of the dot-com bubble and affected most advanced economies including the European Union, Japan and the United States. An economic recession will normally cause household incomes to decrease, often by as much as 10%.

The late-2000s recession began with the bursting of the U.S. housing bubble, which caused a problem in the dangerously exposed sub prime-mortgage market. This in turn triggered a global financial crisis. In constant price, 2011 American median household income was 1.13% lower than what it was in 1989. This corresponds to a 0.05% annual decrease over a 22-year period.[28] In the meantime, GDP per capita has increased by 33.8% or 1.33% annually.[29]

A study on US Census income data claims that when using the national accounting methodology, U.S. gross median household income was $57,739 in 2010 (table 3).[30]

In 2015, the US median household income spiked 5.2 per cent, reaching $56,000, making it the first annual hike in median household income since the start of the Great Recession.[31]

Mean household income

Another common measurement of personal income is the mean household income. Unlike the median household income, which divides all households in two halves, the mean income is the average income earned by American households. In the case of mean income, the income of all households is divided by the number of all households.[32] The mean income is more affected by the relatively unequal distribution of income which tilts towards the top.[33] As a result, the mean income in the United States is higher than the median income, with the top earning households boosting it. Overall, the mean household income in the United States, according to the US Census Bureau 2014 Annual Social and Economic Supplement, was $72,641.[34]

The US Census Bureau also provides a breakdown by self-identified ethnic groups as follows (as of March 2018):

Mean household income by ethnicity[34]
Ethnic category Mean household income
Asian alone $119,816
White alone $93,948
Hispanic or Latino $70,945
Black $59,363

Mean vs. median household income

Median income is the amount which divides the income distribution into two equal groups, half having income above that amount, and half having income below that amount. Mean income (average) is the amount obtained by dividing the total aggregate income of a group by the number of units in that group. The means and medians for households and families are based on all households and families. Means and medians for people are based on people 15 years old and over with income.

— US Census Bureau, Frequently Asked Question, published by First Gov.[32]

Aggregate income distribution

The aggregate income measures the combined income earned by all persons in a particular income group. In 2018, the total personal income earned in the United States was $17.6 trillion.[35] In 2008, all households in the United States earned roughly $12,442.2 billion.[35] One half, 49.98%, of all income in the US was earned by households with an income over $100,000, the top twenty percent. Over one quarter, 28.5%, of all income was earned by the top 8%, those households earning more than $150,000 a year. The top 3.65%, with incomes over $200,000, earned 17.5%. Households with annual incomes from $50,000 to $75,000, 18.2% of households, earned 16.5% of all income. Households with annual incomes from $50,000 to $95,000, 28.1% of households, earned 28.8% of all income. The bottom 10.3% earned 1.06% of all income.[citation needed]

Household income and demographics

Racial and ethnic groups

White Americans made up roughly 75.1% of all people in 2000,[36] 87.93% of all households in the top 5% were headed by a person who identified as being White alone. Only 4.75% of all household in the top 5% were headed by someone who identified as Hispanic or Latino of any race,[37] versus 12.5% of persons identifying themselves as Hispanic or Latino in the general population.[36]

Overall, 86.01% of all households in the top two quintiles with upper-middle range incomes of over $55,332 were headed by someone identifying as White alone, while 7.21% were being headed by someone who identified as Hispanic and 7.37% by someone who identified as African American or Black.[37] Overall, households headed by Hispanics and African Americans were underrepresented in the top two quintiles and overrepresented in the bottom two quintiles. Households headed by people who identified as being Asian alone were also overrepresented among the top two quintiles. In the top five percent the percentage of Asians was nearly twice as high as the percentage of Asians among the general population. Whites were relatively even distributed throughout the quintiles only being underrepresented in the lowest quintile and slightly overrepresented in the top quintile and the top five percent.[37]

In terms of race in 2004(!) data, Asian-American households had the highest median household income of $57,518, European-American households ranked second with $48,977, Hispanic or Latino households ranked third with $34,241. African-American or Black households had the lowest median household income of all races with $30,134.[38]

Note: This data is roughly 20 years old. Use with care.

Ethnic group All households Lowest fifth Second fifth Middle fifth Fourth fifth Highest fifth Top 5%
White alone Number in 1000s 92,702 16,940 18,424 18,978 19,215 19,721 5,029
Percentage 81.93% 74.87% 81.42% 83.87% 84.92% 87.16% 87.93%
Asian alone Number in 1000s 4,140 624 593 786 871 1,265 366
Percentage 3.65% 2.76% 2.26% 3.47% 3.84% 5.59% 6.46%
Black Number in 1000s 13,792 4,474 3,339 2,637 2,053 1,287 236
Percentage 12.19% 19.77% 14.75% 11.65% 9.07% 5.69% 4.17%
Hispanic or Latino
(of any race)
Number in 1000s 12,838 3,023 3,130 2,863 1,931 1,204 269
Percentage 11.33% 13.56% 13.83% 12.20% 8.53% 5.89% 4.75%

Source: US Census Bureau, 2004[37]

Education and gender

 
Median annual household income in accordance with the householder's educational attainment. The data only includes households with a householder over the age of twenty-five.[39]

Household income as well as per capita income in the United States rise significantly as the educational attainment increases.[40] In 2005 graduates with a Master's in Business Administration (MBA) who accepted job offers were expected to earn a base salary of $88,626. They were also expected to receive an "average signing bonus of $17,428."[41]

According to the US Census Bureau persons with doctorates in the United States had an average income of roughly $81,400. The average for an advanced degree was $72,824, with men averaging $90,761 and women averaging $50,756 annually. Year-round full-time workers with a professional degree had an average income of $109,600 while those with a master's degree had an average income of $62,300. Overall, "…[a]verage earnings ranged from $18,900 for high school dropouts to $25,900 for high school graduates, $45,400 for college graduates and $99,300 for workers with professional degrees (M.D., O.D., D.P.T., D.P.M., D.O., J.D., Pharm.D., D.D.S., or D.V.M.)."[42]

Individuals with graduate degrees have an average per capita income exceeding the median household income of married couple families among the general population ($63,813 annually).[42][43] Higher educational attainment did not, however, help close the income gap between the genders as the life-time earnings for a male with a professional degree were roughly forty percent (39.59%) higher than those of a female with a professional degree. The lifetime earnings gap between males and females was the smallest for those individuals holding an associate degrees with male life-time earnings being 27.77% higher than those of females. While educational attainment did not help reduce the income inequality between men and women, it did increase the earnings potential of individuals of both sexes, enabling many households with one or more graduate degree householders to enter the top household income quintile.[42] These data were not adjusted for preferential differences among men and women whom attend college.

Household income also increased significantly with the educational attainment of the householder. The US Census Bureau publishes educational attainment and income data for all households with a householder who was aged twenty-five or older. The biggest income difference was between those with some college education and those who had a Bachelor's degree, with the latter making $23,874 more annually. Income also increased substantially with increased post-secondary education. While the median annual household income for a household with a householder having an associate degree was $51,970, the median annual household income for householders with a bachelor's degree or higher was $73,446. Those with doctorates had the second highest median household with a median of $96,830; $18,289 more than that for those at the master's degree level, but $3,170 lower than the median for households with a professional degree holding householder.[39]

Distribution of household income by educational attainment and gender in 2019 according to US Census data

Criteria Overall Less than 9th grade Some high school High school graduate or equivalent Some college Associate degree Bachelor's degree Bachelor's degree or more Master's degree Professional degree Doctoral degree
Median annual individual income[44] Male, age 25+ $52,297 $29,405 $32,112 $41,580 $49,676 $53,082 $70,968 $78,156 $89,915 $135,970 $112,305
Female, age 25+ $40,294 $20,252 $21,851 $28,166 $32,679 $35,970 $50,691 $56,047 $61,861 $88,301 $87,394
Age 25+ $46,985 $25,162 $26,092 $35,540 $39,362 $42,391 $60,705 $66,432 $71,851 $102,741 $101,526
Median annual household income[45] $70,308 $30,355 $31,326 $48,708 $61,911 $69,573 $100,164 $108,646 $117,439 $162,127 $142,347
Median household income, age 25+[46]

The change in median personal and household since 1991 also varied greatly with educational attainment. The following table shows the median household income according to the educational attainment of the householder. All data is in 2003 dollars and only applies to householders whose householder is aged twenty-five or older. The highest and lowest points of the median household income are presented in bold face.[39][47] Since 2003, median income has continued to rise for the nation as a whole, with the biggest gains going to those with associate degrees, bachelor's degree or more, and master's degrees. High-school dropouts fared worse with negative growth.

Year Overall Median Less than 9th grade Some high school High school graduate Some college Associate degree Bachelor's degree Bachelor's degree or more Master's degree Professional degree Doctoral degree
1991 $40,873 $17,414 $23,096 $37,520 $46,296 $52,289 $64,150 $68,845 $72,669 $102,667 $92,614
1993 $40,324 $17,450 $22,523 $35,979 $44,153 $49,622 $64,537 $70,349 $75,645 $109,900 $93,712
1995 $42,235 $18,031 $21,933 $37,609 $44,537 $50,485 $63,357 $69,584 $77,865 $98,302 $95,899
1997 $43,648 $17,762 $22,688 $38,607 $45,734 $51,726 $67,487 $72,338 $77,850 $105,409 $99,699
1999 $46,236 $19,008 $23,977 $39,322 $48,588 $54,282 $70,925 $76,958 $82,097 $110,383 $107,217
2001 $42,900 $18,830 $24,162 $37,468 $47,605 $53,166 $69,796 $75,116 $81,993 $103,918 $96,442
2003 $45,016 $18,787 $22,718 $36,835 $45,854 $56,970 $68,728 $73,446 $78,541 $100,000 $96,830
Average $43,376 $18,183 $23,013 $37,620 $46,109 $51,934 $66,997 $72,376 $78,094 $104,368 $94,487

Source: US Census Bureau, 2003[39]

Age of householder

 
U.S. family pre-tax income and net worth distribution for 2013 and 2016, from the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances.[48]

Household income in the United States varies substantially with the age of the person who heads the household. Overall, the median household income increased with the age of householder until retirement age when household income started to decline.[49] The highest median household income was found among households headed by working baby-boomers.[49]

Households headed by persons between the ages of 45 and 54 had a median household income of $61,111 and a mean household income of $77,634. The median income per member of household for this particular group was $27,924. The highest median income per member of household was among those between the ages of 54 and 64 with $30,544 [The reason this figure is lower than the next group is because pensions and Social Security add to income while a portion of older individuals also have work-related income.].[49]

The group with the second highest median household income, were households headed by persons between the ages 35 and 44 with a median income of $56,785, followed by those in the age group between 55 and 64 with $50,400. Not surprisingly the lowest income group was composed of those households headed by individuals younger than 24, followed by those headed by persons over the age of 75. Overall, households headed by persons above the age of seventy-five had a median household income of $20,467 with the median household income per member of household being $18,645. These figures support the general assumption that median household income as well as the median income per member of household peaked among those households headed by middle aged persons, increasing with the age of the householder and the size of the household until the householder reaches the age of 64. With retirement income replacing salaries and the size of the household declining, the median household income decreases as well.[49]

Household size

While median household income has a tendency to increase up to four persons per household, it declines for households beyond four persons. For example, in the state of Alabama in 2004, two-person households had a median income of $39,755, with $48,957 for three-person households, $54,338 for four-person households, $50,905 for five-person households, $45,435 for six-person households, with seven-or-more-person households having the second lowest median income of only $42,471.[50]

Geography

Considering other racial and geographical differences in regards to household income, it should come as no surprise that the median household income varies with race, size of household and geography. The state with the highest median household income in the United States as of the US Census Bureau 2009 is Maryland with $69,272, followed by New Jersey, Connecticut and Alaska, making the Northeastern United States the wealthiest area by income in the entire country.[51]

Regionally, in 2010, the Northeast reached a median income of $53,283, the West, $53,142, the South, $45,492, and the Midwest, $48,445.[52] Each figure represents a decline from the previous year.

Median household income by state

 
Map of states by median household income in 2019.

In 2007, the median household income by state ranged from $36,338 in Mississippi to $68,080 in Maryland. Despite having the highest median home price in the nation[53] and home prices that far outpaced incomes,[54] California ranked only eighth in income that year, with a median household income of $59,984. While California's median income was not near enough to afford the average California home or even a starter home, West Virginia, which had one of the nation's lowest median household incomes, also had the nation's lowest median home price.[53][55]

When grouped by Census Bureau Region, of the 15 states that, in 2017, had the highest median household income, only Minnesota is located in the Mid-West. Five are in the Northeast (Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey and Rhode Island), three are South Atlantic states (Washington D.C., Maryland and Virginia) while the remaining six are in the West (Alaska, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Washington and Utah).

The southern states had, on average, the lowest median household income, with nine of the country's fifteen poorest states located in the South. However, most of the poverty in the South is located in rural areas. Metropolitan areas such as Atlanta, Nashville, Charlotte, Raleigh, Birmingham, Dallas, Houston, and Miami are areas within the southern states that have above average income levels. Overall, median household income tended to be the highest in the nation's most urbanized northeastern, upper midwestern and west coast states, while rural areas, mostly in the southern and mountain states (like New Mexico, Montana and Idaho), had the lowest median household income.[55]

As of 2019, the median household income ranged from $20,474 in Puerto Rico to $92,266 in the District of Columbia. Note that the U.S. Census Bureau treats Puerto Rico as if it were a state (Puerto Rico is included in the American Community Survey).[56]

All data is from the 2009–2019 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates.[57][58][59][60][61]

Rank Change*
 / 
State
or territory
2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009
1   8 District of Columbia $92,266 $85,203 $82,336 $75,506 $75,628 $71,648 $67,572 $65,246 $66,583 $63,124 $59,290
2   1 Maryland $86,738 $83,242 $80,776 $78,945 $75,847 $73,971 $72,483 $71,836 $70,004 $68,854 $69,272
3   3 Massachusetts $85,843 $79,835 $77,385 $75,297 $70,628 $69,160 $66,768 $65,339 $62,859 $62,072 $64,081
4   2 New Jersey $85,751 $81,740 $80,088 $76,126 $72,222 $72,919 $70,165 $69,667 $67,458 $67,681 $68,342
5   Hawaii $83,102 $80,212 $77,765 $74,511 $73,486 $69,592 $68,020 $66,259 $61,821 $63,030 $64,098
6   4 California $80,440 $75,277 $71,805 $67,739 $64,500 $61,933 $60,190 $58,328 $57,287 $57,708 $58,931
7   4 Connecticut $78,833 $76,348 $74,168 $73,433 $71,346 $70,048 $67,098 $67,276 $65,753 $64,032 $67,034
8   4 Washington $78,687 $74,043 $70,979 $67,106 $64,129 $61,366 $58,405 $57,573 $56,835 $55,631 $56,548
9   2 New Hampshire $77,933 $74,991 $73,381 $70,936 $70,303 $66,532 $64,230 $63,280 $62,647 $61,042 $60,567
10   4 Colorado $77,127 $71,953 $69,117 $65,685 $63,909 $61,303 $58,823 $56,765 $55,387 $54,046 $55,430
11   3 Virginia $76,456 $72,577 $71,535 $68,114 $66,262 $64,902 $62,666 $61,741 $61,882 $60,674 $59,330
12   3 Utah $75,780 $71,414 $68,358 $65,977 $62,912 $60,922 $59,770 $57,049 $55,869 $54,744 $55,117
13   9 Alaska $75,463 $74,346 $73,181 $76,440 $73,355 $71,583 $72,237 $67,712 $67,825 $64,576 $66,953
14   1 Minnesota $74,593 $70,315 $68,388 $65,599 $63,488 $61,481 $60,702 $58,906 $56,954 $55,459 $55,616
15   1 New York $72,108 $67,844 $64,894 $62,909 $60,850 $58,878 $57,369 $56,448 $55,246 $54,148 $54,659
16   1 Rhode Island $71,169 $64,340 $63,870 $60,596 $58,073 $54,891 $55,902 $54,554 $53,636 $52,254 $54,119
17   6 Delaware $70,176 $64,805 $62,852 $61,757 $61,255 $59,716 $57,846 $54,554 $58,814 $55,847 $56,860
18   Illinois $69,187 $65,030 $62,992 $60,960 $59,588 $57,444 $56,210 $55,137 $53,234 $52,972 $53,966
19   6 Oregon $67,058 $63,246 $60,212 $57,532 $54,148 $51,075 $50,251 $49,161 $46,816 $46,560 $48,457
20   Wyoming $65,003 $61,584 $60,434 $59,882 $60,214 $57,055 $58,752 $54,901 $56,322 $53,512 $52,664
21   8 North Dakota $64,577 $63,837 $61,843 $60,656 $60,557 $59,029 $55,759 $53,585 $51,704 $48,670 $47,827
22   Wisconsin $64,168 $60,773 $59,305 $56,811 $55,638 $52,622 $51,467 $51,059 $50,395 $49,001 $49,993
23   4 Texas $64,034 $60,629 $59,206 $56,565 $55,653 $53,035 $51,704 $50,740 $49,392 $48,615 $48,259
24 –1 Pennsylvania $63,463 $60,905 $59,195 $56,907 $55,702 $53,234 $52,007 $51,230 $50,228 $49,288 $49,520
25   6 Nevada $63,276 $58,646 $58,003 $55,180 $52,431 $51,450 $51,230 $49,760 $48,927 $51,001 $53,341
26   Nebraska $63,229 $59,566 $59,970 $56,927 $54,996 $52,686 $51,440 $50,723 $50,296 $52,504 $48,408
27   6 Vermont $63,001 $60,782 $57,513 $57,677 $56,990 $54,166 $52,578 $52,997 $52,776 $49,406 $51,618
28   2 Kansas $62,087 $58,218 $56,422 $54,935 $53,906 $52,504 $50,972 $50,241 $48,264 $48,257 $47,817
29   5 Arizona $62,055 $59,246 $56,581 $53,558 $51,492 $50,068 $48,510 $47,826 $46,709 $46,789 $48,745
30   8 Georgia $61,980 $58,756 $56,183 $53,559 $51,244 $49,321 $47,829 $47,209 $46,007 $46,430 $44,736
31   3 Iowa $61,691 $59,955 $58,570 $56,247 $54,736 $53,712 $52,229 $50,957 $49,427 $47,961 $48,044
32   5 Idaho $60,999 $55,583 $52,225 $51,807 $48,275 $47,861 $46,783 $45,489 $43,341 $43,490 $44,926
33   1 Michigan $59,584 $56,697 $54,909 $52,492 $51,084 $49,847 $48,273 $46,859 $45,981 $45,413 $45,255
34   2 South Dakota $59,533 $56,274 $56,894 $54,467 $53,017 $50,979 $48,947 $48,362 $48,321 $45,904 $45,043
35   4 Florida $59,227 $55,462 $52,594 $50,860 $49,426 $47,463 $46,036 $45,040 $44,299 $44,409 $44,736
36   5 Maine $58,924 $55,602 $56,277 $53,079 $51,494 $49,462 $46,974 $46,709 $46,033 $45,815 $45,734
37   4 Ohio $58,642 $56,111 $54,021 $52,334 $51,075 $49,308 $48,081 $46,829 $45,749 $45,090 $45,395
38   6 Indiana $57,603 $55,746 $54,181 $52,314 $50,532 $49,446 $47,529 $46,974 $46,438 $44,613 $45,424
39   4 Missouri $57,409 $54,478 $53,578 $51,746 $50,238 $48,363 $46,931 $45,321 $45,247 $44,301 $45,229
40   North Carolina $57,341 $53,855 $52,752 $50,584 $47,830 $46,556 $45,906 $45,150 $43,916 $43,326 $43,674
41   3 Montana $57,153 $55,328 $53,386 $50,027 $49,509 $46,328 $46,972 $45,076 $44,222 $42,666 $42,322
42   South Carolina $56,227 $52,306 $50,570 $49,501 $47,238 $45,238 $44,163 $43,107 $43,916 $42,018 $42,442
43   2 Tennessee $56,071 $52,375 $51,340 $48,547 $47,275 $44,361 $44,297 $42,764 $41,693 $41,461 $41,725
44   2 Oklahoma $54,449 $51,924 $50,051 $49,176 $48,568 $47,529 $45,690 $44,312 $43,225 $42,072 $41,664
45   3 Kentucky $52,295 $50,247 $48,375 $46,659 $44,765 $42,958 $43,399 $41,724 $41,141 $40,062 $40,072
46   5 New Mexico $51,945 $47,169 $46,744 $46,748 $45,382 $44,803 $43,872 $42,558 $41,963 $42,090 $43,028
47   Alabama $51,734 $49,861 $48,123 $46,257 $44,765 $42,830 $42,849 $41,574 $41,415 $40,474 $40,489
48   5 Louisiana $51,073 $47,905 $46,145 $45,146 $45,727 $44,555 $44,164 $42,944 $41,734 $42,505 $42,429
49   2 Arkansas $48,952 $47,062 $45,869 $45,907 $42,798 $44,922 $39,376 $39,018 $41,302 $38,587 $36,538
50   1 West Virginia $48,850 $44,097 $43,469 $43,385 $42,019 $41,059 $41,253 $40,196 $38,482 $37,218 $37,435
51   1 Mississippi $45,792 $44,717 $43,529 $41,754 $40,593 $39,680 $37,963 $37,095 $36,919 $36,851 $36,646
52   Puerto Rico $20,474 $20,296 $19,775 $20,078 $18,810 $18,948 $19,183 $19,630

*change since 2009

The median personal income per person, after adjusting for costs of living with local regional price parities and the national PCE price index, averaged $47,807 in 2016 (in 2012 chained dollars). Median adjusted personal income per capita varied from $39,901 in Mississippi to $61,601 in Connecticut (and $64,363 in the District of Columbia). The states closest to the national average were California and Vermont, at $48,384 and $47,971 respectively.[62]

Median household income by U.S. territory

Below is the median household income for the U.S. territories in 2010 (for four of the five inhabited territories).[63] Note that Puerto Rico is not included in this table, and is instead included in the table above (because Puerto Rico is included in the ACS, as if it were a state).

Rank Territory 2010
U.S. Census
1 Guam $48,274
2 U.S. Virgin Islands $37,254
3 American Samoa $23,892
4 Northern Mariana Islands $19,958

Social class

Household income is one of the most commonly used measures of income and, therefore, also one of the most prominent indicators of social class. Household income and education do not, however, always reflect perceived class status correctly. Sociologist Dennis Gilbert acknowledges that "... the class structure... does not exactly match the distribution of household income" with "the mismatch [being] greatest in the middle..." (Gilbert, 1998: 92) As social classes commonly overlap, it is not possible to define exact class boundaries.

According to Leonard Beeghley[citation needed] a household income of roughly $95,000 would be typical of a dual-earner middle class household while $60,000 would be typical of a dual-earner working class household and $18,000 typical for an impoverished household. William Thompson and Joseph Hickey[citation needed] see common incomes for the upper class as those exceeding $500,000 with upper middle class incomes ranging from the high 5-figures to most commonly in excess of $100,000. They claim the lower middle class ranges from $35,000 to $75,000; $16,000 to $30,000 for the working class and less than $2,000 for the lower class.

Academic class models
Dennis Gilbert, 2002 William Thompson & Joseph Hickey, 2005 Leonard Beeghley, 2004
Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics
Capitalist class (1%) Top-level executives, high-rung politicians, heirs. Ivy League education common. Upper class (1%) Top-level executives, celebrities, heirs; income of $500,000+ common. Ivy league education common. The super-rich (0.9%) Multi-millionaires whose incomes commonly exceed $3.5 million or more; includes celebrities and powerful executives/politicians. Ivy League education common.
Upper middle class[1] (15%) Highly-educated (often with graduate degrees), most commonly salaried, professionals and middle management with large work autonomy. Upper middle class[1] (15%) Highly-educated (often with graduate degrees) professionals & managers with household incomes varying from the high 5-figure range to commonly above $100,000. The rich (5%) Households with net worth of $1 million or more; largely in the form of home equity. Generally have college degrees.
Middle class (plurality/
majority?; ca. 46%)
College-educated workers with considerably higher-than-average incomes and compensation; a man making $57,000 and a woman making $40,000 may be typical.
Lower middle class (30%) Semi-professionals and craftsmen with a roughly average standard of living. Most have some college education and are white-collar. Lower middle class (32%) Semi-professionals and craftsmen with some work autonomy; household incomes commonly range from $35,000 to $75,000. Typically, some college education.
Working class (30%) Clerical and most blue-collar workers whose work is highly routinized. Standard of living varies depending on number of income earners, but is commonly just adequate. High school education.
Working class (32%) Clerical, pink- and blue-collar workers with often low job security; common household incomes range from $16,000 to $30,000. High school education. Working class
(ca. 40–45%)
Blue-collar workers and those whose jobs are highly routinized with low economic security; a man making $40,000 and a woman making $26,000 may be typical. High school education.
Working poor (13%) Service, low-rung clerical and some blue-collar workers. High economic insecurity and risk of poverty. Some high school education.
Lower class (ca. 14–20%) Those who occupy poorly-paid positions or rely on government transfers. Some high school education.
Underclass (12%) Those with limited or no participation in the labor force. Reliant on government transfers. Some high school education. The poor (ca. 12%) Those living below the poverty line with limited to no participation in the labor force; a household income of $18,000 may be typical. Some high school education.
References: Gilbert, D. (2002) The American Class Structure: In An Age of Growing Inequality. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, ISBN 0534541100. (see also Gilbert Model);
Thompson, W. & Hickey, J. (2005). Society in Focus. Boston, MA: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon; Beeghley, L. (2004). The Structure of Social Stratification in the United States. Boston, MA: Pearson, Allyn & Bacon.
1 The upper middle class may also be referred to as "Professional class" Ehrenreich, B. (1989). The Inner Life of the Middle Class. NY, NY: Harper-Collins.

Distribution of household income

Distribution of household income in 2019 according to US Census data

 
Percentage of persons and households in each of the income groups shown.[citation needed]
 
The percent of households with six figure incomes and individuals with incomes in the top 10%, exceeding $77,500.[citation needed]
US Census Bureau figures for 2019
Income of Household Number (thousands) [64] Percent in Group Percent At or Below Mean Income [64] Mean number of earners [45] Mean size of household [45]
Total 128,451 $98,088 1.32 2.53
Under $5,000 3784 2.95 2.95 $1,095 0.20 1.78
$5,000 to $9,999 2702 2.10 5.05 $7,917 0.36 1.72
$10,000 to $14,999 5141 4.00 9.05 $12,413 0.30 1.52
$15,000 to $19,999 5171 4.03 13.08 $17,358 0.44 1.68
$20,000 to $24,999 5066 3.94 17.02 $22,272 0.63 1.88
$25,000 to $29,999 5247 4.08 21.10 $27,054 0.74 2.05
$30,000 to $34,999 5457 4.25 25.35 $32,165 0.83 2.14
$35,000 to $39,999 4702 3.65 29.00 $37,127 0.92 2.23
$40,000 to $44,999 5377 4.20 33.20 $41,981 0.99 2.21
$45,000 to $49,999 4972 3.87 37.07 $47,098 1.05 2.28
$50,000 to $54,999 4885 3.80 40.87 $52,000 1.15 2.36
$55,000 to $59,999 4364 3.40 44.27 $57,148 1.20 2.44
$60,000 to $64,999 4531 3.53 47.80 $61,985 1.42 2.44
$65,000 to $69,999 3655 2.85 50.65 $67,147 1.42 2.66
$70,000 to $74,999 3807 2.95 53.60 $72,099 1.39 2.60
$75,000 to $79,999 3549 2.75 56.35 $77,015 1.46 2.61
$80,000 to $84,999 3402 2.65 59.00 $81,993 1.55 2.70
$85,000 to $89,999 3013 2.35 61.35 $87,072 1.62 2.71
$90,000 to $94,999 3023 2.35 63.70 $92,096 1.60 2.71
$95,000 to $99,999 2817 2.20 65.90 $97,282 1.71 2.86
$100,000 to $104,999 2852 2.22 68.12 $102,087 1.64 2.85
$105,000 to $109,999 2491 1.95 70.07 $107,156 1.73 2.84
$110,000 to $114,999 2413 1.88 71.95 $111,979 1.77 2.89
$115,000 to $119,999 1965 1.53 73.48 $117,101 1.94 3.11
$120,000 to $124,999 2393 1.86 75.34 $121,995 1.85 2.98
$125,000 to $129,999 1785 1.40 76.74 $127,103 1.89 3.03
$130,000 to $134,999 1778 1.38 78.12 $132,095 1.91 3.06
$135,000 to $139,999 1582 1.23 79.35 $137,223 1.92 3.06
$140,000 to $144,999 1400 1.10 80.45 $142,087 1.86 3.08
$145,000 to $149,999 1311 1.02 81.47 $147,147 1.92 3.15
$150,000 to $154,999 1721 1.34 82.81 $151,963 1.82 2.96
$155,000 to $159,999 1208 0.94 83.75 $157,272 2.01 3.11
$160,000 to $164,999 1260 0.98 84.73 $161,959 2.07 3.16
$165,000 to $169,999 1008 0.78 85.51 $167,185 2.12 3.20
$170,000 to $174,999 1251 0.97 86.48 $172,193 1.98 3.16
$175,000 to $179,999 997 0.78 87.26 $177,153 1.98 3.25
$180,000 to $184,999 908 0.71 87.97 $181,968 2.06 3.32
$185,000 to $189,999 820 0.64 88.61 $187,216 2.05 3.09
$190,000 to $194,999 828 0.64 89.25 $192,064 2.05 3.26
$195,000 to $199,999 647 0.50 89.75 $197,211 2.14 3.28
$200,000 to $249,999 5354 4.15 93.90 $221,050 2.09 3.23
$250,000 and over 7816 6.10 100.00 $416,871

See also

General:

References

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External links

  • Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States: 2003
  • Reynolds, Alan (January 8, 2007). "Has U.S. Income Inequality Really Increased?" (PDF). Policy Analysis. CATO Institute.
  • NPR.org statistics and background on income inequality in the United States

household, income, united, states, information, income, individuals, personal, income, united, states, parts, this, article, those, related, documentation, need, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, informati. For information on the income of individuals see Personal income in the United States Parts of this article those related to documentation need to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information September 2020 Household income is an economic standard that can be applied to one household or aggregated across a large group such as a county city or the whole country It is commonly used by the United States government and private institutions to describe a household s economic status or to track economic trends in the US Median US household income through 2019 U S real median household income reached 63 688 in January 2019 an increase of 171 or 0 3 over one month December 2018 1 A key measure of household income is the median income at which half of households have income above that level and half below The U S Census Bureau reports two median household income estimates based on data from two surveys the Current Population Survey CPS and the American Community Survey ACS The CPS is the recommended source for national level estimates whereas the ACS gives estimates for many geographic levels 2 19 3 10 According to the CPS the median household income was 63 179 in 2018 2 4 According to the ACS the U S median household income in 2018 was 61 937 3 Estimates for previous years are given in terms of real income which have been adjusted for changes to the price of goods and services The distribution of U S household income has become more unequal since around 1980 with the income share received by the top 1 trending upward from around 10 or less over the 1953 1981 period to over 20 by 2007 5 After falling somewhat due to the Great Recession in 2008 and 2009 inequality rose again during the economic recovery a typical pattern historically 6 7 Contents 1 Definition 2 Recent trends 3 Uses 4 Median inflation adjusted real household income 4 1 CBO income growth study 5 Mean household income 6 Mean vs median household income 7 Aggregate income distribution 8 Household income and demographics 8 1 Racial and ethnic groups 8 2 Education and gender 8 2 1 Distribution of household income by educational attainment and gender in 2019 according to US Census data 8 3 Age of householder 8 4 Household size 8 5 Geography 8 5 1 Median household income by state 8 5 2 Median household income by U S territory 9 Social class 10 Distribution of household income 10 1 Distribution of household income in 2019 according to US Census data 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksDefinition EditA household s income can be calculated in various ways but the US Census as of 2009 measured it in the following manner the income of every resident of that house that is over the age of 15 including pre tax wages and salaries along with any pre tax personal business investment or other recurring sources of income as well as any kind of governmental entitlement such as unemployment insurance social security disability payments or child support payments received 8 The residents of the household do not have to be related to the head of the household for their earnings to be considered part of the household s income 9 As households tend to share a similar economic context the use of household income remains among the most widely accepted measures of income That the size of a household is not commonly taken into account in such measures may distort any analysis of fluctuations within or among the household income categories and may render direct comparisons between quintiles difficult or even impossible 10 The US Census does not include noncash benefits such as health benefits 11 Recent trends Edit U S economic growth is not translating into higher median family incomes Real GDP per household has typically increased since the year 2000 while real median income per household was below 1999 levels until 2016 indicating a trend of greater income inequality 12 Total compensation s share of GDP has declined by 4 5 percentage points from 1970 to 2016 This implies that the share attributed to capital increased in that period U S real wages i e production for ordinary i e non supervisory workers remain slightly below their 1970s peak 13 The Current Population Survey of the U S Census Bureau reported in September 2017 that real median household income was 59 039 in 2016 exceeding any previous year This was the fourth consecutive year with a statistically significant increase by their measure 14 Changes in median income reflect several trends the aging of the population changing patterns in work and schooling and the evolving makeup of the American family as well as long and short term trends in the economy itself For instance the retirement of the Baby Boom generation should push down overall median income as more persons enter lower income retirement However analysis of different working age groups indicate a similar pattern of stagnating median income as well 15 Journalist Annie Lowrey wrote in September 2014 The root causes of wage stagnation include technological change the decline of labor unions and globalization economists think though they disagree sharply on how much to weight each factor But foreign produced goods became sharply cheaper meaning imports climbed and production moved overseas And computers took over for humans in many manufacturing clerical and administrative tasks eroding middle class jobs growth and suppressing wages 16 Another line of analysis known as total compensation presents a more complete picture of real wages The Kaiser Family Foundation conducted a study in 2013 which shows that employer contributions to employee healthcare costs went up 78 from 2003 to 2013 17 The marketplace has made a trade off expanding benefits packages vs increasing wages Measured relative to GDP total compensation and its component wages and salaries have been declining since 1970 This indicates a shift in income from labor persons who derive income from hourly wages and salaries to capital persons who derive income via ownership of businesses land and assets This trend is common across the developed world due in part to globalization 18 Wages and salaries have fallen from approximately 51 GDP in 1970 to 43 GDP in 2013 Total compensation has fallen from approximately 58 GDP in 1970 to 53 GDP in 2013 citation needed However as indicated by the charts below household income has still increased significantly since the late 1970s and early 80s in real terms partly due to higher individual median wages and partly due to increased employment of women According to the CBO between 1979 and 2011 gross median household income adjusted for inflation rose from 59 400 to 75 200 or 26 5 19 However once adjusted for household size and looking at taxes from an after tax perspective real median household income grew 46 representing significant growth 20 The following table summarizes real median household income at key recent milestones Variable 1999 Previous Record 2007 Pre Crisis Peak 2012 Post Crisis Trough 2016 Previous Record 2017 Previous Record 2018 RecordReal median household income 21 61 526 60 985 55 900 61 779 62 626 63 179Uses EditUse of individual household income The government and organizations may look at one particular household s income to decide if a person is eligible for certain programs such as nutrition assistance 22 or need based financial aid 23 among many others Use at the aggregate level Summaries of household incomes across groups of people often the entire country are also studied as part of economic trends like standard of living and distribution of income and wealth Household income as an economic measure can be represented as a median a mean a distribution and other ways Household income can be studied across time region education level race ethnicity and many other dimensions As an indicator of economic trends it may be studied along with related economic measures such as disposable income debt household net worth which includes debt and investments durable goods like cars and houses wealth and employment statistics Median inflation adjusted real household income EditMedian inflation adjusted real household income generally increases and decreases with the business cycle declining in each year during the periods 1979 through 1983 1990 through 1993 2000 through 2004 and 2008 through 2012 while rising in each of the intervening years 19 Extreme poverty in the United States meaning households living on less than 2 per person per day before government benefits more than doubled in absolute terms from 636 000 to 1 46 million households including 2 8 million children between 1996 and 2011 with most of this increase occurring between late 2008 and early 2011 24 Median household income by county as of 2017 CBO income growth study Edit The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office conducted a study analyzing household income throughout the income distribution by combining the Census and IRS income data sources Unlike the Census measure of household income the CBO showed income before and after taxes and by also taking into account household size 25 Also the CBO definition of income is much broader and includes in kind transfers as well as all monetary transfers from the government 25 The Census official definition of money income excludes food stamps and the EITC for example while CBO includes it Between 1979 and 2011 gross median household income adjusted for inflation rose from 59 400 to 75 200 or 26 5 This compares with the Census growth of 10 19 However once adjusted for household size and looking at taxes from an after tax perspective real median household income grew 46 representing significant growth 20 While median gross household income showed much stronger growth than depicted by the Census inequality was shown to still have increased The top 10 saw gross household income grow by 78 versus 26 5 for the median The bottom 10 using the same measure saw higher growth than the median 40 20 This graph shows the income since 1970 of different racial and ethnic groups in the United States in 2014 dollars 26 Since 1980 U S gross domestic product GDP per capita has increased 67 27 while median household income has only increased by 15 Median household income is a politically sensitive indicator Voters can be critical of their government if they perceive that their cost of living is rising faster than their income The early 2000s recession began with the bursting of the dot com bubble and affected most advanced economies including the European Union Japan and the United States An economic recession will normally cause household incomes to decrease often by as much as 10 The late 2000s recession began with the bursting of the U S housing bubble which caused a problem in the dangerously exposed sub prime mortgage market This in turn triggered a global financial crisis In constant price 2011 American median household income was 1 13 lower than what it was in 1989 This corresponds to a 0 05 annual decrease over a 22 year period 28 In the meantime GDP per capita has increased by 33 8 or 1 33 annually 29 A study on US Census income data claims that when using the national accounting methodology U S gross median household income was 57 739 in 2010 table 3 30 In 2015 the US median household income spiked 5 2 per cent reaching 56 000 making it the first annual hike in median household income since the start of the Great Recession 31 Mean household income EditAnother common measurement of personal income is the mean household income Unlike the median household income which divides all households in two halves the mean income is the average income earned by American households In the case of mean income the income of all households is divided by the number of all households 32 The mean income is more affected by the relatively unequal distribution of income which tilts towards the top 33 As a result the mean income in the United States is higher than the median income with the top earning households boosting it Overall the mean household income in the United States according to the US Census Bureau 2014 Annual Social and Economic Supplement was 72 641 34 The US Census Bureau also provides a breakdown by self identified ethnic groups as follows as of March 2018 Mean household income by ethnicity 34 Ethnic category Mean household incomeAsian alone 119 816White alone 93 948Hispanic or Latino 70 945Black 59 363Mean vs median household income EditMedian income is the amount which divides the income distribution into two equal groups half having income above that amount and half having income below that amount Mean income average is the amount obtained by dividing the total aggregate income of a group by the number of units in that group The means and medians for households and families are based on all households and families Means and medians for people are based on people 15 years old and over with income US Census Bureau Frequently Asked Question published by First Gov 32 Aggregate income distribution EditThis section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information August 2018 The aggregate income measures the combined income earned by all persons in a particular income group In 2018 the total personal income earned in the United States was 17 6 trillion 35 In 2008 all households in the United States earned roughly 12 442 2 billion 35 One half 49 98 of all income in the US was earned by households with an income over 100 000 the top twenty percent Over one quarter 28 5 of all income was earned by the top 8 those households earning more than 150 000 a year The top 3 65 with incomes over 200 000 earned 17 5 Households with annual incomes from 50 000 to 75 000 18 2 of households earned 16 5 of all income Households with annual incomes from 50 000 to 95 000 28 1 of households earned 28 8 of all income The bottom 10 3 earned 1 06 of all income citation needed Household income and demographics EditRacial and ethnic groups Edit Main article List of ethnic groups in the United States by household income personal and household income in the United States Census in 2005 White Americans made up roughly 75 1 of all people in 2000 36 87 93 of all households in the top 5 were headed by a person who identified as being White alone Only 4 75 of all household in the top 5 were headed by someone who identified as Hispanic or Latino of any race 37 versus 12 5 of persons identifying themselves as Hispanic or Latino in the general population 36 Overall 86 01 of all households in the top two quintiles with upper middle range incomes of over 55 332 were headed by someone identifying as White alone while 7 21 were being headed by someone who identified as Hispanic and 7 37 by someone who identified as African American or Black 37 Overall households headed by Hispanics and African Americans were underrepresented in the top two quintiles and overrepresented in the bottom two quintiles Households headed by people who identified as being Asian alone were also overrepresented among the top two quintiles In the top five percent the percentage of Asians was nearly twice as high as the percentage of Asians among the general population Whites were relatively even distributed throughout the quintiles only being underrepresented in the lowest quintile and slightly overrepresented in the top quintile and the top five percent 37 In terms of race in 2004 data Asian American households had the highest median household income of 57 518 European American households ranked second with 48 977 Hispanic or Latino households ranked third with 34 241 African American or Black households had the lowest median household income of all races with 30 134 38 Note This data is roughly 20 years old Use with care Ethnic group All households Lowest fifth Second fifth Middle fifth Fourth fifth Highest fifth Top 5 White alone Number in 1000s 92 702 16 940 18 424 18 978 19 215 19 721 5 029Percentage 81 93 74 87 81 42 83 87 84 92 87 16 87 93 Asian alone Number in 1000s 4 140 624 593 786 871 1 265 366Percentage 3 65 2 76 2 26 3 47 3 84 5 59 6 46 Black Number in 1000s 13 792 4 474 3 339 2 637 2 053 1 287 236Percentage 12 19 19 77 14 75 11 65 9 07 5 69 4 17 Hispanic or Latino of any race Number in 1000s 12 838 3 023 3 130 2 863 1 931 1 204 269Percentage 11 33 13 56 13 83 12 20 8 53 5 89 4 75 Source US Census Bureau 2004 37 Education and gender Edit Median annual household income in accordance with the householder s educational attainment The data only includes households with a householder over the age of twenty five 39 Household income as well as per capita income in the United States rise significantly as the educational attainment increases 40 In 2005 graduates with a Master s in Business Administration MBA who accepted job offers were expected to earn a base salary of 88 626 They were also expected to receive an average signing bonus of 17 428 41 According to the US Census Bureau persons with doctorates in the United States had an average income of roughly 81 400 The average for an advanced degree was 72 824 with men averaging 90 761 and women averaging 50 756 annually Year round full time workers with a professional degree had an average income of 109 600 while those with a master s degree had an average income of 62 300 Overall a verage earnings ranged from 18 900 for high school dropouts to 25 900 for high school graduates 45 400 for college graduates and 99 300 for workers with professional degrees M D O D D P T D P M D O J D Pharm D D D S or D V M 42 Individuals with graduate degrees have an average per capita income exceeding the median household income of married couple families among the general population 63 813 annually 42 43 Higher educational attainment did not however help close the income gap between the genders as the life time earnings for a male with a professional degree were roughly forty percent 39 59 higher than those of a female with a professional degree The lifetime earnings gap between males and females was the smallest for those individuals holding an associate degrees with male life time earnings being 27 77 higher than those of females While educational attainment did not help reduce the income inequality between men and women it did increase the earnings potential of individuals of both sexes enabling many households with one or more graduate degree householders to enter the top household income quintile 42 These data were not adjusted for preferential differences among men and women whom attend college Household income also increased significantly with the educational attainment of the householder The US Census Bureau publishes educational attainment and income data for all households with a householder who was aged twenty five or older The biggest income difference was between those with some college education and those who had a Bachelor s degree with the latter making 23 874 more annually Income also increased substantially with increased post secondary education While the median annual household income for a household with a householder having an associate degree was 51 970 the median annual household income for householders with a bachelor s degree or higher was 73 446 Those with doctorates had the second highest median household with a median of 96 830 18 289 more than that for those at the master s degree level but 3 170 lower than the median for households with a professional degree holding householder 39 Distribution of household income by educational attainment and gender in 2019 according to US Census data Edit Criteria Overall Less than 9th grade Some high school High school graduate or equivalent Some college Associate degree Bachelor s degree Bachelor s degree or more Master s degree Professional degree Doctoral degreeMedian annual individual income 44 Male age 25 52 297 29 405 32 112 41 580 49 676 53 082 70 968 78 156 89 915 135 970 112 305Female age 25 40 294 20 252 21 851 28 166 32 679 35 970 50 691 56 047 61 861 88 301 87 394Age 25 46 985 25 162 26 092 35 540 39 362 42 391 60 705 66 432 71 851 102 741 101 526Median annual household income 45 70 308 30 355 31 326 48 708 61 911 69 573 100 164 108 646 117 439 162 127 142 347Median household income age 25 46 The change in median personal and household since 1991 also varied greatly with educational attainment The following table shows the median household income according to the educational attainment of the householder All data is in 2003 dollars and only applies to householders whose householder is aged twenty five or older The highest and lowest points of the median household income are presented in bold face 39 47 Since 2003 median income has continued to rise for the nation as a whole with the biggest gains going to those with associate degrees bachelor s degree or more and master s degrees High school dropouts fared worse with negative growth Year Overall Median Less than 9th grade Some high school High school graduate Some college Associate degree Bachelor s degree Bachelor s degree or more Master s degree Professional degree Doctoral degree1991 40 873 17 414 23 096 37 520 46 296 52 289 64 150 68 845 72 669 102 667 92 6141993 40 324 17 450 22 523 35 979 44 153 49 622 64 537 70 349 75 645 109 900 93 7121995 42 235 18 031 21 933 37 609 44 537 50 485 63 357 69 584 77 865 98 302 95 8991997 43 648 17 762 22 688 38 607 45 734 51 726 67 487 72 338 77 850 105 409 99 6991999 46 236 19 008 23 977 39 322 48 588 54 282 70 925 76 958 82 097 110 383 107 2172001 42 900 18 830 24 162 37 468 47 605 53 166 69 796 75 116 81 993 103 918 96 4422003 45 016 18 787 22 718 36 835 45 854 56 970 68 728 73 446 78 541 100 000 96 830Average 43 376 18 183 23 013 37 620 46 109 51 934 66 997 72 376 78 094 104 368 94 487Source US Census Bureau 2003 39 Age of householder Edit U S family pre tax income and net worth distribution for 2013 and 2016 from the Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances 48 Household income in the United States varies substantially with the age of the person who heads the household Overall the median household income increased with the age of householder until retirement age when household income started to decline 49 The highest median household income was found among households headed by working baby boomers 49 Households headed by persons between the ages of 45 and 54 had a median household income of 61 111 and a mean household income of 77 634 The median income per member of household for this particular group was 27 924 The highest median income per member of household was among those between the ages of 54 and 64 with 30 544 The reason this figure is lower than the next group is because pensions and Social Security add to income while a portion of older individuals also have work related income 49 The group with the second highest median household income were households headed by persons between the ages 35 and 44 with a median income of 56 785 followed by those in the age group between 55 and 64 with 50 400 Not surprisingly the lowest income group was composed of those households headed by individuals younger than 24 followed by those headed by persons over the age of 75 Overall households headed by persons above the age of seventy five had a median household income of 20 467 with the median household income per member of household being 18 645 These figures support the general assumption that median household income as well as the median income per member of household peaked among those households headed by middle aged persons increasing with the age of the householder and the size of the household until the householder reaches the age of 64 With retirement income replacing salaries and the size of the household declining the median household income decreases as well 49 Household size Edit While median household income has a tendency to increase up to four persons per household it declines for households beyond four persons For example in the state of Alabama in 2004 two person households had a median income of 39 755 with 48 957 for three person households 54 338 for four person households 50 905 for five person households 45 435 for six person households with seven or more person households having the second lowest median income of only 42 471 50 Geography Edit Considering other racial and geographical differences in regards to household income it should come as no surprise that the median household income varies with race size of household and geography The state with the highest median household income in the United States as of the US Census Bureau 2009 is Maryland with 69 272 followed by New Jersey Connecticut and Alaska making the Northeastern United States the wealthiest area by income in the entire country 51 Regionally in 2010 the Northeast reached a median income of 53 283 the West 53 142 the South 45 492 and the Midwest 48 445 52 Each figure represents a decline from the previous year Median household income by state Edit Main article List of U S states and territories by income Map of states by median household income in 2019 In 2007 the median household income by state ranged from 36 338 in Mississippi to 68 080 in Maryland Despite having the highest median home price in the nation 53 and home prices that far outpaced incomes 54 California ranked only eighth in income that year with a median household income of 59 984 While California s median income was not near enough to afford the average California home or even a starter home West Virginia which had one of the nation s lowest median household incomes also had the nation s lowest median home price 53 55 When grouped by Census Bureau Region of the 15 states that in 2017 had the highest median household income only Minnesota is located in the Mid West Five are in the Northeast Connecticut Massachusetts New Hampshire New Jersey and Rhode Island three are South Atlantic states Washington D C Maryland and Virginia while the remaining six are in the West Alaska California Colorado Hawaii Washington and Utah The southern states had on average the lowest median household income with nine of the country s fifteen poorest states located in the South However most of the poverty in the South is located in rural areas Metropolitan areas such as Atlanta Nashville Charlotte Raleigh Birmingham Dallas Houston and Miami are areas within the southern states that have above average income levels Overall median household income tended to be the highest in the nation s most urbanized northeastern upper midwestern and west coast states while rural areas mostly in the southern and mountain states like New Mexico Montana and Idaho had the lowest median household income 55 As of 2019 the median household income ranged from 20 474 in Puerto Rico to 92 266 in the District of Columbia Note that the U S Census Bureau treats Puerto Rico as if it were a state Puerto Rico is included in the American Community Survey 56 All data is from the 2009 2019 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates 57 58 59 60 61 Rank Change Stateor territory 2019 2018 2017 2016 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 20091 8 District of Columbia 92 266 85 203 82 336 75 506 75 628 71 648 67 572 65 246 66 583 63 124 59 2902 1 Maryland 86 738 83 242 80 776 78 945 75 847 73 971 72 483 71 836 70 004 68 854 69 2723 3 Massachusetts 85 843 79 835 77 385 75 297 70 628 69 160 66 768 65 339 62 859 62 072 64 0814 2 New Jersey 85 751 81 740 80 088 76 126 72 222 72 919 70 165 69 667 67 458 67 681 68 3425 Hawaii 83 102 80 212 77 765 74 511 73 486 69 592 68 020 66 259 61 821 63 030 64 0986 4 California 80 440 75 277 71 805 67 739 64 500 61 933 60 190 58 328 57 287 57 708 58 9317 4 Connecticut 78 833 76 348 74 168 73 433 71 346 70 048 67 098 67 276 65 753 64 032 67 0348 4 Washington 78 687 74 043 70 979 67 106 64 129 61 366 58 405 57 573 56 835 55 631 56 5489 2 New Hampshire 77 933 74 991 73 381 70 936 70 303 66 532 64 230 63 280 62 647 61 042 60 56710 4 Colorado 77 127 71 953 69 117 65 685 63 909 61 303 58 823 56 765 55 387 54 046 55 43011 3 Virginia 76 456 72 577 71 535 68 114 66 262 64 902 62 666 61 741 61 882 60 674 59 33012 3 Utah 75 780 71 414 68 358 65 977 62 912 60 922 59 770 57 049 55 869 54 744 55 11713 9 Alaska 75 463 74 346 73 181 76 440 73 355 71 583 72 237 67 712 67 825 64 576 66 95314 1 Minnesota 74 593 70 315 68 388 65 599 63 488 61 481 60 702 58 906 56 954 55 459 55 61615 1 New York 72 108 67 844 64 894 62 909 60 850 58 878 57 369 56 448 55 246 54 148 54 65916 1 Rhode Island 71 169 64 340 63 870 60 596 58 073 54 891 55 902 54 554 53 636 52 254 54 11917 6 Delaware 70 176 64 805 62 852 61 757 61 255 59 716 57 846 54 554 58 814 55 847 56 86018 Illinois 69 187 65 030 62 992 60 960 59 588 57 444 56 210 55 137 53 234 52 972 53 96619 6 Oregon 67 058 63 246 60 212 57 532 54 148 51 075 50 251 49 161 46 816 46 560 48 45720 Wyoming 65 003 61 584 60 434 59 882 60 214 57 055 58 752 54 901 56 322 53 512 52 66421 8 North Dakota 64 577 63 837 61 843 60 656 60 557 59 029 55 759 53 585 51 704 48 670 47 82722 Wisconsin 64 168 60 773 59 305 56 811 55 638 52 622 51 467 51 059 50 395 49 001 49 99323 4 Texas 64 034 60 629 59 206 56 565 55 653 53 035 51 704 50 740 49 392 48 615 48 25924 1 Pennsylvania 63 463 60 905 59 195 56 907 55 702 53 234 52 007 51 230 50 228 49 288 49 52025 6 Nevada 63 276 58 646 58 003 55 180 52 431 51 450 51 230 49 760 48 927 51 001 53 34126 Nebraska 63 229 59 566 59 970 56 927 54 996 52 686 51 440 50 723 50 296 52 504 48 40827 6 Vermont 63 001 60 782 57 513 57 677 56 990 54 166 52 578 52 997 52 776 49 406 51 61828 2 Kansas 62 087 58 218 56 422 54 935 53 906 52 504 50 972 50 241 48 264 48 257 47 81729 5 Arizona 62 055 59 246 56 581 53 558 51 492 50 068 48 510 47 826 46 709 46 789 48 74530 8 Georgia 61 980 58 756 56 183 53 559 51 244 49 321 47 829 47 209 46 007 46 430 44 73631 3 Iowa 61 691 59 955 58 570 56 247 54 736 53 712 52 229 50 957 49 427 47 961 48 04432 5 Idaho 60 999 55 583 52 225 51 807 48 275 47 861 46 783 45 489 43 341 43 490 44 92633 1 Michigan 59 584 56 697 54 909 52 492 51 084 49 847 48 273 46 859 45 981 45 413 45 25534 2 South Dakota 59 533 56 274 56 894 54 467 53 017 50 979 48 947 48 362 48 321 45 904 45 04335 4 Florida 59 227 55 462 52 594 50 860 49 426 47 463 46 036 45 040 44 299 44 409 44 73636 5 Maine 58 924 55 602 56 277 53 079 51 494 49 462 46 974 46 709 46 033 45 815 45 73437 4 Ohio 58 642 56 111 54 021 52 334 51 075 49 308 48 081 46 829 45 749 45 090 45 39538 6 Indiana 57 603 55 746 54 181 52 314 50 532 49 446 47 529 46 974 46 438 44 613 45 42439 4 Missouri 57 409 54 478 53 578 51 746 50 238 48 363 46 931 45 321 45 247 44 301 45 22940 North Carolina 57 341 53 855 52 752 50 584 47 830 46 556 45 906 45 150 43 916 43 326 43 67441 3 Montana 57 153 55 328 53 386 50 027 49 509 46 328 46 972 45 076 44 222 42 666 42 32242 South Carolina 56 227 52 306 50 570 49 501 47 238 45 238 44 163 43 107 43 916 42 018 42 44243 2 Tennessee 56 071 52 375 51 340 48 547 47 275 44 361 44 297 42 764 41 693 41 461 41 72544 2 Oklahoma 54 449 51 924 50 051 49 176 48 568 47 529 45 690 44 312 43 225 42 072 41 66445 3 Kentucky 52 295 50 247 48 375 46 659 44 765 42 958 43 399 41 724 41 141 40 062 40 07246 5 New Mexico 51 945 47 169 46 744 46 748 45 382 44 803 43 872 42 558 41 963 42 090 43 02847 Alabama 51 734 49 861 48 123 46 257 44 765 42 830 42 849 41 574 41 415 40 474 40 48948 5 Louisiana 51 073 47 905 46 145 45 146 45 727 44 555 44 164 42 944 41 734 42 505 42 42949 2 Arkansas 48 952 47 062 45 869 45 907 42 798 44 922 39 376 39 018 41 302 38 587 36 53850 1 West Virginia 48 850 44 097 43 469 43 385 42 019 41 059 41 253 40 196 38 482 37 218 37 43551 1 Mississippi 45 792 44 717 43 529 41 754 40 593 39 680 37 963 37 095 36 919 36 851 36 64652 Puerto Rico 20 474 20 296 19 775 20 078 18 810 18 948 19 183 19 630 change since 2009The median personal income per person after adjusting for costs of living with local regional price parities and the national PCE price index averaged 47 807 in 2016 in 2012 chained dollars Median adjusted personal income per capita varied from 39 901 in Mississippi to 61 601 in Connecticut and 64 363 in the District of Columbia The states closest to the national average were California and Vermont at 48 384 and 47 971 respectively 62 Median household income by U S territory Edit Below is the median household income for the U S territories in 2010 for four of the five inhabited territories 63 Note that Puerto Rico is not included in this table and is instead included in the table above because Puerto Rico is included in the ACS as if it were a state Rank Territory 2010U S Census1 Guam 48 2742 U S Virgin Islands 37 2543 American Samoa 23 8924 Northern Mariana Islands 19 958Social class EditMain article Social class in the United States Household income is one of the most commonly used measures of income and therefore also one of the most prominent indicators of social class Household income and education do not however always reflect perceived class status correctly Sociologist Dennis Gilbert acknowledges that the class structure does not exactly match the distribution of household income with the mismatch being greatest in the middle Gilbert 1998 92 As social classes commonly overlap it is not possible to define exact class boundaries According to Leonard Beeghley citation needed a household income of roughly 95 000 would be typical of a dual earner middle class household while 60 000 would be typical of a dual earner working class household and 18 000 typical for an impoverished household William Thompson and Joseph Hickey citation needed see common incomes for the upper class as those exceeding 500 000 with upper middle class incomes ranging from the high 5 figures to most commonly in excess of 100 000 They claim the lower middle class ranges from 35 000 to 75 000 16 000 to 30 000 for the working class and less than 2 000 for the lower class Academic class models Dennis Gilbert 2002 William Thompson amp Joseph Hickey 2005 Leonard Beeghley 2004Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristics Class Typical characteristicsCapitalist class 1 Top level executives high rung politicians heirs Ivy League education common Upper class 1 Top level executives celebrities heirs income of 500 000 common Ivy league education common The super rich 0 9 Multi millionaires whose incomes commonly exceed 3 5 million or more includes celebrities and powerful executives politicians Ivy League education common Upper middle class 1 15 Highly educated often with graduate degrees most commonly salaried professionals and middle management with large work autonomy Upper middle class 1 15 Highly educated often with graduate degrees professionals amp managers with household incomes varying from the high 5 figure range to commonly above 100 000 The rich 5 Households with net worth of 1 million or more largely in the form of home equity Generally have college degrees Middle class plurality majority ca 46 College educated workers with considerably higher than average incomes and compensation a man making 57 000 and a woman making 40 000 may be typical Lower middle class 30 Semi professionals and craftsmen with a roughly average standard of living Most have some college education and are white collar Lower middle class 32 Semi professionals and craftsmen with some work autonomy household incomes commonly range from 35 000 to 75 000 Typically some college education Working class 30 Clerical and most blue collar workers whose work is highly routinized Standard of living varies depending on number of income earners but is commonly just adequate High school education Working class 32 Clerical pink and blue collar workers with often low job security common household incomes range from 16 000 to 30 000 High school education Working class ca 40 45 Blue collar workers and those whose jobs are highly routinized with low economic security a man making 40 000 and a woman making 26 000 may be typical High school education Working poor 13 Service low rung clerical and some blue collar workers High economic insecurity and risk of poverty Some high school education Lower class ca 14 20 Those who occupy poorly paid positions or rely on government transfers Some high school education Underclass 12 Those with limited or no participation in the labor force Reliant on government transfers Some high school education The poor ca 12 Those living below the poverty line with limited to no participation in the labor force a household income of 18 000 may be typical Some high school education References Gilbert D 2002 The American Class Structure In An Age of Growing Inequality Belmont CA Wadsworth ISBN 0534541100 see also Gilbert Model Thompson W amp Hickey J 2005 Society in Focus Boston MA Pearson Allyn amp Bacon Beeghley L 2004 The Structure of Social Stratification in the United States Boston MA Pearson Allyn amp Bacon 1 The upper middle class may also be referred to as Professional class Ehrenreich B 1989 The Inner Life of the Middle Class NY NY Harper Collins Distribution of household income EditSee also Income inequality in the United States Distribution of household income in 2019 according to US Census data Edit Percentage of persons and households in each of the income groups shown citation needed The percent of households with six figure incomes and individuals with incomes in the top 10 exceeding 77 500 citation needed US Census Bureau figures for 2019 Income of Household Number thousands 64 Percent in Group Percent At or Below Mean Income 64 Mean number of earners 45 Mean size of household 45 Total 128 451 98 088 1 32 2 53Under 5 000 3784 2 95 2 95 1 095 0 20 1 78 5 000 to 9 999 2702 2 10 5 05 7 917 0 36 1 72 10 000 to 14 999 5141 4 00 9 05 12 413 0 30 1 52 15 000 to 19 999 5171 4 03 13 08 17 358 0 44 1 68 20 000 to 24 999 5066 3 94 17 02 22 272 0 63 1 88 25 000 to 29 999 5247 4 08 21 10 27 054 0 74 2 05 30 000 to 34 999 5457 4 25 25 35 32 165 0 83 2 14 35 000 to 39 999 4702 3 65 29 00 37 127 0 92 2 23 40 000 to 44 999 5377 4 20 33 20 41 981 0 99 2 21 45 000 to 49 999 4972 3 87 37 07 47 098 1 05 2 28 50 000 to 54 999 4885 3 80 40 87 52 000 1 15 2 36 55 000 to 59 999 4364 3 40 44 27 57 148 1 20 2 44 60 000 to 64 999 4531 3 53 47 80 61 985 1 42 2 44 65 000 to 69 999 3655 2 85 50 65 67 147 1 42 2 66 70 000 to 74 999 3807 2 95 53 60 72 099 1 39 2 60 75 000 to 79 999 3549 2 75 56 35 77 015 1 46 2 61 80 000 to 84 999 3402 2 65 59 00 81 993 1 55 2 70 85 000 to 89 999 3013 2 35 61 35 87 072 1 62 2 71 90 000 to 94 999 3023 2 35 63 70 92 096 1 60 2 71 95 000 to 99 999 2817 2 20 65 90 97 282 1 71 2 86 100 000 to 104 999 2852 2 22 68 12 102 087 1 64 2 85 105 000 to 109 999 2491 1 95 70 07 107 156 1 73 2 84 110 000 to 114 999 2413 1 88 71 95 111 979 1 77 2 89 115 000 to 119 999 1965 1 53 73 48 117 101 1 94 3 11 120 000 to 124 999 2393 1 86 75 34 121 995 1 85 2 98 125 000 to 129 999 1785 1 40 76 74 127 103 1 89 3 03 130 000 to 134 999 1778 1 38 78 12 132 095 1 91 3 06 135 000 to 139 999 1582 1 23 79 35 137 223 1 92 3 06 140 000 to 144 999 1400 1 10 80 45 142 087 1 86 3 08 145 000 to 149 999 1311 1 02 81 47 147 147 1 92 3 15 150 000 to 154 999 1721 1 34 82 81 151 963 1 82 2 96 155 000 to 159 999 1208 0 94 83 75 157 272 2 01 3 11 160 000 to 164 999 1260 0 98 84 73 161 959 2 07 3 16 165 000 to 169 999 1008 0 78 85 51 167 185 2 12 3 20 170 000 to 174 999 1251 0 97 86 48 172 193 1 98 3 16 175 000 to 179 999 997 0 78 87 26 177 153 1 98 3 25 180 000 to 184 999 908 0 71 87 97 181 968 2 06 3 32 185 000 to 189 999 820 0 64 88 61 187 216 2 05 3 09 190 000 to 194 999 828 0 64 89 25 192 064 2 05 3 26 195 000 to 199 999 647 0 50 89 75 197 211 2 14 3 28 200 000 to 249 999 5354 4 15 93 90 221 050 2 09 3 23 250 000 and over 7816 6 10 100 00 416 871See also EditList of countries by average wage Wikimedia Commons has media related to Household income in the United States Income inequality in the United States Economy of the United States Personal income in the United States Employee compensation in the United States Standard of living in the United StatesGeneral Income inequality metrics Atkinson index Gini coefficient Hoover index Theil index International Ranking of Household Income Marriage gap Median income per household memberReferences Edit Federal Reserve Economic Data Real Median Household Income Retrieved September 15 2018 a b Income and Poverty in the United States 2018 PDF census gov U S Department of Commerce Retrieved July 20 2020 a b Household Income 2018 PDF census gov U S Department of Commerce Retrieved July 20 2020 Real Median Household Income in the United States 2018 stlouisfed org Retrieved October 3 2019 Emmanuel Saez Income and Wealth Inequality October 2014 PDF Eml berkeley edu Retrieved October 14 2017 Tcherneva Pavlina R August 2014 This Chart Shows Just How Un Equal Things Are During A Champion Of The 99 s Administration Independent Journal Review Archived from the original on September 13 2014 Retrieved September 13 2014 Binyamin Appelbaum September 4 2014 Fed Says Growth Lifts the Affluent Leaving Behind Everyone Else The New York Times Retrieved September 13 2014 Census Long Form Definition United States Department of Housing and Urban Development July 30 2009 Archived from the original on October 8 2012 Glossary household income South Carolina Community Profiles Archived from the original on April 21 2006 Retrieved August 10 2006 Gilbert Dennis 1998 The American Class Structure New York Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 0 534 50520 1 About Income United States Census Bureau United States Census Bureau Retrieved April 17 2019 Neil Irwin September 17 2014 You Can t Feed a Family With G D P The New York Times Paul Krugman November 12 2014 On Income Stagnation The New York Times U S Household Incomes Rose to Record in 2016 as Poverty Fell Bloomberg com September 12 2017 Retrieved October 14 2017 Casselman Ben September 22 2014 The American Middle Class Hasn t Gotten a Raise in 15 Years FiveThirtyEight Archived from the original on November 3 2014 Retrieved September 29 2014 Annie Lowrey Will US Economy Ever Be As Good As in the 90s Daily Intelligencer 2013 Summary of Findings The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation Kff org August 20 2013 Archived from the original on April 3 2016 Retrieved October 14 2017 Monetary policy and long term trends Voxeu org Retrieved October 14 2017 a b c Historical Income Tables Households U S Census Bureau Census gov Retrieved October 14 2017 a b c The Distribution of Household Income and Federal Taxes 2011 Cbo gov November 12 2014 Archived from the original on October 13 2017 Retrieved October 14 2017 FRED Real Median Household Income Retrieved April 20 2019 WIC Income Eligibility Guidelines United States Department of Agriculture September 12 2013 Archived from the original on September 13 2014 Retrieved September 13 2014 Federal Student Aid U S Department of Education September 12 2013 Shaefer H Luke Edin Kathryn February 2012 Extreme Poverty in the United States 1996 to 2011 PDF Policy Brief National Poverty Center 28 a b The Distribution of Household Income and Federal Taxes 2011 PDF Congressional Budget Office November 12 2014 DeNavas Walt Carmen Proctor Bernadette D Smith Jessica C September 2012 Real Median Household Income by Race and Hispanic Origin 1967 to 2010 Income Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2014 PDF U S Census Bureau p 8 Report for Selected Countries and Subjects www imf org Income Data Bureau of Economic Analysis www bea gov Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on April 11 2015 Retrieved July 21 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Picchi Aimee September 13 2016 An end to wage stagnation American incomes jump 5 2 CBS News Archived from the original on September 14 2016 Retrieved September 13 2016 a b U S Census Bureau FAQs What is the difference between a median and a mean United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on September 22 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 US Census Bureau on the nature the median in determining wealth PDF May 2003 Retrieved June 29 2006 a b Race and Hispanic Origin of Householder Households by Median and Mean Income US Census Bureau March 2018 Retrieved March 25 2019 a b Personal income U S Bureau of Labor Statistics Archived from the original on January 24 2020 Retrieved January 24 2019 a b US Census Bureau 2000 Census racial data Archived from the original on February 12 2020 Retrieved June 29 2006 a b c d US Census Bureau 2005 Economic survey racial income distribution Archived from the original on July 7 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 US Census Bureau median household income according to certain demographic characteristics August 30 2005 Archived from the original on June 18 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 a b c d Educational attainment and median household income Archived from the original on September 3 2006 Retrieved September 24 2006 US Census Bureau Income by education and sex Archived from the original on April 11 2006 Retrieved June 30 2006 Wall Street Journal on MBA salary base 2006 Archived from the original on March 18 2007 Retrieved June 30 2006 a b c US Census Bureau on Education and Income PDF Retrieved June 30 2006 Infoplease median household income Infoplease com Retrieved June 29 2006 PINC 03 Educational Attainment People 25 Years Old and Over by Total Money Earnings Work Experience Age Race Hispanic Origin and Sex US Census Bureau Retrieved August 30 2022 a b c Selected Characteristics of Households by Total Money Income in 2019 US Census Bureau Retrieved July 25 2022 US Census table H 14 Retrieved June 7 2020 Personal income and educational attainment US Census Bureau Archived from the original on September 7 2006 Retrieved September 24 2006 Federal Reserve Bulletin September 2017 Vol 103 No 3 See PDF Changes in U S Family Finances from 2013 to 2016 Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances Table 1 on the left is taken from page 4 of the PDF Table 2 on the right is taken from page 13 See Survey of Consumer Finances and more data a b c d US Census Bureau median household income by age of householder Archived from the original on May 28 2006 Retrieved July 7 2006 US Census Bureau median family income by family size Archived from the original on June 26 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 US Census Bureau median household income by state Archived from the original on June 28 2006 Retrieved June 29 2006 DeNavas Walt Carmen Proctor Bernadette D Smith Jessica C September 2011 Income Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2010 PDF U S Census Bureau p 9 Archived from the original PDF on October 16 2011 a b Median home price by state Clevelandfed org November 2005 Archived from the original on June 14 2006 Retrieved July 1 2006 The State of the Nation s Housing 2002 PDF Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University Archived from the original PDF on November 10 2011 a b US Census Bureau median household income by state 2004 Archived from the original on June 28 2006 Retrieved July 1 2006 https web archive org web 20190830181655 http www3 drcog org documents archive ACS Basics pdf U S Census Bureau An Overview Of the American Community Survey Page 5 archived Retrieved July 2 2020 Median income dollars HOUSEHOLD INCOME BY RACE AND HISPANIC OR LATINO ORIGIN OF HOUSEHOLDER Households Estimate in 52 Geos in 2019 United States Census Bureau Retrieved February 21 2022 https www census gov content dam Census library publications 2017 acs acsbr16 02 pdf U S Census Bureau Household Income 2016 Retrieved July 2 2020 https www census gov content dam Census library publications 2016 acs acsbr15 02 pdf U S Census Bureau Household Income 2015 Retrieved July 2 2020 https www2 census gov library publications 2014 acs acsbr13 02 pdf U S Census Bureau Household income 2013 Retrieved July 2 2020 https www theweeklyjournal com politics trump signs bill avoiding medicaid cliff for puerto rico for article 6905fce2 e473 11e9 9195 9fbdbb0490af html Theweeklyjournal com Trump Signs Bill Avoiding Medicaid Cliff for Puerto Rico For Now Rosario Fajardo October 2 2019 Retrieved July 2 2020 Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Data RPI1 Real Personal Income per capita by state U S Department of Commerce Updated September 25 2018 Retrieved October 8 2018 American FactFinder U S Census Bureau Profile of Selected Economic Characteristics 2010 Table DP 3 for American Samoa Guam Northern Mariana Islands U S Virgin Islands URLs no longer available a b Income Distribution to 250 000 or More for Households 2019 US Census Bureau Retrieved July 25 2022 External links EditIncome Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the United States 2003 Reynolds Alan January 8 2007 Has U S Income Inequality Really Increased PDF Policy Analysis CATO Institute U S Census Bureau s web site for income statistics NPR org statistics and background on income inequality in the United States Datasets by U S State of low income very low income extremely low income limits Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Household income in the United States amp oldid 1135795319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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