- Income in the United States: 2024 - Census. gov
This report presents data on income, earnings, income inequality in the United States based on information collected in the 2025 and earlier CPS ASEC
- Families and Households - Census. gov
Families and Households All Census Bureau demographic surveys collect information about the residents of each housing unit and how they are related The level of detail collected varies, as well as the availability of other characteristics of household members
- Household Income in States and Metropolitan Areas: 2024
This report presents data on median household income and the Gini index of income inequality based on the 2023 and 2024 American Community Surveys (ACS)
- Income, Poverty and Health Insurance Coverage in the U. S. : 2024
Appendix B of the income report compares household median income and inequality measures based on post-tax income Median post-tax household income increased by 1 8% from $71,040 in 2023 to $72,330 in 2024
- Census Glossary
A household includes all the people who occupy a housing unit (such as a house or apartment) as their usual place of residence A household includes the related family members and all the unrelated people, if any, such as lodgers, foster children, wards, or employees who share the housing unit
- 2025 - Census. gov
Household Trends and Outlook Pulse Survey Release February 2025 PUF: February 21, 2025 – March 7, 2025 HTOPS Household Pulse February 2025 PUF SAS [8 2 MB] HTOPS Household Pulse February 2025 PUF CSV [9 7 MB] Share Facebook X (Twitter)
- Fewer Than Half of U. S. Households Are Married-Couple Households
DECEMBER 2, 2025 — Newly released estimates from the U S Census Bureau’s historical America’s Families and Living Arrangements tables show that fewer than half (47%) of U S households in 2025 were married couples — a significant shift from 50 years earlier, when nearly two-thirds (66%) were Among married-couple households, the share with their own children declined over the past
- Families and Households Glossary - Census. gov
In CPS tables labeled as family groups, each married couple or parent child group is counted separately, even if they reside in the same household So, for example, if a household consists of a married couple, one of whom is the householder, and their adult daughter and her child, the married couple will be one family group, and the adult daughter and her child will be a second family group
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