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Mapped: Income Growth in Every U.S. State Since 2010

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Mapped: Income Growth in Every U.S. State Since 2010

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Key Takeaways

  • Montana leads the U.S. with 42.9% growth in real median household income since 2010, nearly double the national average.
  • Several Mountain West and Southern states rank among the fastest-growing, including Tennessee and Kansas.
  • New Mexico (2.3%) and Mississippi (5.6%) saw the smallest gains over the period.

Since 2010, real household incomes have risen significantly across the U.S., with some states seeing gains of more than 40%.

Montana leads the nation with a 42.9% increase in real median household income over the period, followed by Tennessee and Kansas.

This map shows how much incomes have grown in every U.S. state from 2010 to 2024, based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

Where Incomes Have Grown the Most

Montana has seen one of the biggest income turnarounds in America. In 2010, the state ranked seventh-lowest in median household income, but today it sits closer to the middle of the national rankings.

Over that period, real median household income climbed 42.9%, from $57,320 to $81,920.

Rank State Median Income 2010 Median Income 2024 Change 2010-2024
1 Montana $57,320 $81,920 42.9%
2 Tennessee $53,580 $75,860 41.6%
3 Kansas $63,950 $87,690 37.1%
4 Maine $66,550 $90,730 36.3%
5 Massachusetts $84,610 $113,900 34.6%
6 California $75,370 $100,600 33.5%
7 South Carolina $57,900 $76,780 32.6%
8 District of Columbia $79,050 $104,800 32.6%
9 Georgia $61,260 $81,210 32.6%
10 Utah $78,730 $104,000 32.1%
11 Arizona $65,120 $84,700 30.1%
12 Rhode Island $71,680 $92,290 28.8%
13 Oregon $70,260 $89,700 27.7%
14 Colorado $83,640 $106,500 27.3%
15 Minnesota $72,650 $92,350 27.1%
16 South Dakota $62,970 $79,850 26.8%
17 Ohio $63,710 $80,520 26.4%
18 New York $69,120 $86,830 25.6%
19 Iowa $68,060 $85,480 25.6%
20 Washington $77,980 $97,500 25.0%
21 Idaho $65,330 $81,650 25.0%
22 North Dakota $70,820 $88,080 24.4%
23 Texas $65,630 $81,490 24.2%
24 Michigan $64,260 $79,460 23.7%
25 Florida $61,190 $75,630 23.6%
26 Missouri $63,620 $78,390 23.2%
27 Maryland $89,150 $109,700 23.1%
28 Arkansas $53,580 $64,840 21.0%
29 New Hampshire $92,520 $111,800 20.8%
30 Indiana $64,070 $76,710 19.7%
31 Illinois $70,440 $84,210 19.5%
32 Pennsylvania $67,090 $80,060 19.3%
33 Hawaii $82,670 $98,240 18.8%
34 New Jersey $87,430 $103,500 18.4%
35 Nebraska $72,900 $86,140 18.2%
36 Wisconsin $69,910 $82,560 18.1%
37 Virginia $83,820 $97,720 16.6%
38 Alabama $56,840 $65,560 15.3%
39 Alaska $80,320 $91,260 13.6%
40 Kentucky $57,070 $64,790 13.5%
41 Nevada $71,090 $80,590 13.4%
42 Delaware $76,670 $85,860 12.0%
43 Louisiana $54,570 $60,740 11.3%
44 North Carolina $60,860 $67,220 10.5%
45 Vermont $77,660 $85,260 9.8%
46 Oklahoma $59,850 $65,310 9.1%
47 Wyoming $72,480 $78,680 8.6%
48 Connecticut $91,640 $99,240 8.3%
49 West Virginia $59,400 $63,150 6.3%
50 Mississippi $52,990 $55,980 5.6%
51 New Mexico $62,670 $64,140 2.3%

Several factors have contributed to the surge of real incomes in Montana, including growth in the tech sector, an expanding tourism industry, and tight labor markets driven by an aging population.

Tennessee and Kansas follow next in line, each seeing wage gains exceeding 37%.

Back in 2010, Tennessee had the second-lowest median income of $53,580. Today, it stands above Florida, jumping nine spots to reach $75,860. In Kansas, meanwhile, median incomes are higher than in New York, at $87,690.

Ranking in fifth is Massachusetts, with incomes rising 34.6% to reach $113,900, the highest nationwide.

Looking over to large state economies, California (33.5%) outpaced New York (25.6%) and Texas (24.2%), likely driven by its concentration of tech workers. Florida, driven largely by services and tourism, saw 23.6% growth—slightly above the national average of 22.4%.

Income Growth Laggards

Many of the states with the slowest income growth since 2010 are concentrated in the South, though laggards appear across several regions.

Mississippi (5.6%) and West Virginia (6.3%) saw some of the weakest gains in real median household income over the period, while Oklahoma (9.1%) and Louisiana (11.3%) also recorded relatively modest increases.

Outside the region, New Mexico posted the smallest rise nationwide at just 2.3%.

For many reasons, the geography of income growth in America has been quietly reshaped. As migration, demographics, and economic activity shift, how much Americans earn may increasingly depend on where they live.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

To learn more about this topic, check out this graphic on the average salary by state in 2025.