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Mapped: Share of Children in Each U.S. State in 2024

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Mapped: Share of Children in Each U.S. State

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Key Takeaways

  • Utah tops all states in the share of residents under 18 (27%), a distinction linked to its relatively high fertility rate.
  • Vermont’s low child share is thinning school enrollment and pushing double-digit education-tax hikes.

The U.S. is aging, but not evenly. Falling birth rates and a swelling retiree population mean today’s national average for children is just 21.7% of residents

This map visualizes the share of children in every state, laying bare a stark geographic divide that hints at future economic winners and losers. Data for this map is sourced from the Census Bureau population estimates as of July 1st, 2024.

Ranked: U.S. States With the Most Children

Utah tops the ranking at 27%, buoyed by its fertility rate—at 1.92 per woman of child-bearing age. For reference, the fertility rate measures the number of children an adult women will bear in her lifetime. Thus, a higher fertility rate equals more children.

And despite Utah seeing the largest declines in fertility this century, it’s still top-four across the country.

Rank State Code Share of Population
Below 18 (%)
1 Utah UT 26.6
2 Texas TX 24.5
3 Nebraska NE 24.1
4 South Dakota SD 23.9
5 Alaska AK 23.6
6 Oklahoma OK 23.6
7 Idaho ID 23.4
8 Kansas KS 23.3
9 North Dakota ND 23.3
10 Louisiana LA 23.2
11 Indiana IN 22.9
12 Mississippi MS 22.9
13 Arkansas AR 22.7
14 Georgia GA 22.7
15 Iowa IA 22.5
16 Kentucky KY 22.4
17 Minnesota MN 22.4
18 Alabama AL 22.0
19 Missouri MO 22.0
20 Maryland MD 21.9
21 Tennessee TN 21.9
22 Wyoming WY 21.8
23 Ohio OH 21.7
24 New Jersey NJ 21.5
25 North Carolina NC 21.4
26 Virginia VA 21.4
27 California CA 21.3
28 Illinois IL 21.2
29 Nevada NV 21.1
30 New Mexico NM 21.0
31 South Carolina SC 21.0
32 Arizona AZ 20.9
33 Michigan MI 20.8
34 Washington WA 20.8
35 Wisconsin WI 20.8
36 Montana MT 20.5
37 Colorado CO 20.4
38 Delaware DE 20.3
39 Hawaii HI 20.3
40 Pennsylvania PA 20.1
41 New York NY 20.0
42 Connecticut CT 19.8
43 West Virginia WV 19.7
44 Florida FL 19.3
45 Oregon OR 19.3
46 Massachusetts MA 19.0
47 District of Columbia DC 18.5
48 Rhode Island RI 18.4
49 New Hampshire NH 17.7
50 Maine ME 17.6
51 Vermont VT 17.4

Neighboring Idaho (23%), South Dakota (24%), and Nebraska (24%) also exceed the national average of children. High fertility rates combined with in-migration of young families keeps the Mountain West demographically youthful.

New England’s Demographic Squeeze

At the other end of the list, Vermont’s children make up just 17% of residents—the lowest share in the country (aside from Puerto Rico not visualized on this map).

Maine and New Hampshire follow at 18%, while Rhode Island and Massachusetts sit at 18–19%.

Low birth rates and persistent out-migration of young adults have sped up population aging across New England, raising alarms over future workforce shortages and rising dependency ratios.

Why the Child Gap Matters for Schools and Budgets

States with fewer kids face practical strains.

In Vermont, enrollment has shrunk by more than 30,000 students over the past three decades.

This creates a vicious cycle: half of Vermont’s 250 school districts have fewer than 100 students, yet maintaining these small schools is expensive, driving up property taxes while educational quality may suffer.

Meanwhile, child-rich states must expand classrooms and childcare but they gain a long-term edge: a deeper talent pipeline that attracts employers and fuels economic growth.

Diverging youth populations today will shape everything from labor markets to congressional apportionment in the decades ahead.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

This most can be accompanied by checking out U.S. States by Share of Older Adults on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.