U.S. States by Median Household Income

Which U.S. states have the greatest household income on average?
Notes
This data is for the year 2024. It comes from the American Community Survey which is run by the U.S. Census Bureau.
All States by Median Household Income
Income State
$109,707 District of Columbia
$104,828 Massachusetts
$104,294 New Jersey
$102,905 Maryland
$100,745 Hawaii
$100,149 California
$99,782 New Hampshire
$99,389 Washington
$97,113 Colorado
$96,658 Utah
$96,049 Connecticut
$95,665 Alaska
$92,090 Virginia
$87,534 Delaware
$87,117 Minnesota
$85,820 New York
$85,220 Oregon
$83,504 Rhode Island
$83,211 Illinois
$82,730 Vermont
$81,486 Arizona
$81,166 Idaho
$81,134 Nevada
$79,991 Georgia
$79,721 Texas
$77,871 North Dakota
$77,735 Florida
$77,545 Pennsylvania
$77,488 Wisconsin
$76,881 South Dakota
$76,442 Maine
$76,376 Nebraska
$75,532 Wyoming
$75,514 Kansas
$75,501 Iowa
$75,340 Montana
$73,958 North Carolina
$72,389 Michigan
$72,350 South Carolina
$72,212 Ohio
$71,997 Tennessee
$71,959 Indiana
$71,589 Missouri
$67,816 New Mexico
$66,659 Alabama
$66,148 Oklahoma
$64,526 Kentucky
$62,106 Arkansas
$60,986 Louisiana
$60,798 West Virginia
$59,127 Mississippi
$27,213 Puerto Rico
No matching quizzes found
9 Comments
+1
Level 43
Nov 4, 2019
Wow
+1
Level 74
Apr 26, 2021
The two states that I have lived in are both in the top 10 :)
+1
Level 68
May 10, 2021
Mine is in the bottom 10 :(
+1
Level 69
Jan 22, 2022
DC is for the top-paying government jobs, so that makes sense. And that filters over into Maryland.

New York filters over into New Jersey and they have less of a "law of averages" for high NYC-area wages to be brought down over a much smaller state and populace, as compared to New York State.

But Massachusetts. Again, I don't get it. Yes, I know...Ivy League universities, especially Harvard. But there's got to be more to it than that. Is it the Puritan heritage? Have the Boston Brahmins somehow done a really good job of retaining intellectual elitism and made sure that applies to so much of the state, even relative to the much greater population surge and talent surge in other, "newer" areas of the country. I don't get it.

+1
Level 81
Dec 23, 2023
Massachusetts only has one Ivy League but Boston has a ton of other schools (MIT, Boston University, Boston College, Northeastern, Tufts, Brandeis, etc.) and most of the state lives in the Boston metro area. Don't think it has anything to do with the Puritan heritage but probably has something to do with the tons of high-paying jobs in Boston in research, finance, medicine, law, and engineering. The only reason it applies to so much of the state is that most of the state is one city.
+1
Level 32
Mar 19, 2022
The two states I have lived in are 19th and 25th highest respectively
+1
Level 54
Jan 2, 2024
Cool! mines at #2 (1 not counting DOC) B)
+1
Level 66
Jan 2, 2024
I'm actually kinda surprised VA isn't lower, considering it is home to one of the wealthiest areas of the country but it is also home to some of the poorest counties in the US.

If it wasn't for NoVA (well actually DC bc Government jobs), than VA would be a lot lower on the list.

There's also a large swath of VA (SWVA) where if you counted just that, it would probably be close to if not in last place.

+1
Level 49
Feb 13, 2026
Isn’t Puerto Rico not a stay it’s a territory