You are here

Mapped: Where U.S. Families are Most Strained by Debt

See more visualizations like this on the Voronoi app.

Use This Visualization

Mapped: Where U.S. Families are Most Strained by Debt

See visuals like this from many other data creators on our Voronoi app. Download it for free on iOS or Android and discover incredible data-driven charts from a variety of trusted sources.

Key Takeaways

  • Hawaii and Idaho have the highest debt-to-income (DTI) ratio of the states at 2.06.
  • This means households carry about $2 in debt for every $1 in annual income.
  • High ratio states (~1.7–2.1) are often places with expensive housing or fast population growth (bigger mortgages, newer borrowers).

Americans are always worrying about debt: their own and their government’s.

This visualization maps each state by their household debt-to-income ratios (DTI) in Q1, 2025, revealing which states carry the heaviest burdens and which ones keep borrowing in check.

Data for this visualization comes from the Federal Reserve. The highest ratio is visualized per state.

Debt includes mortgages, autos, credit cards, etc., and excludes student loans. Income is based on unemployment insurance-covered wages, as reported to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Which States Carry the Most Debt?

Two states share the top spot: Idaho and Hawaii both post a DTI of 2.06, meaning households owe just over twice their annual after-tax income.

Rank State State Code Debt-to-Income Ratio (2025) Debt-to-Income Ratio (1999) 1999–2025 Change
1 Idaho ID 2.06 1.50 0.56
2 Hawaii HI 2.06 2.06 0.00
3 Arizona AZ 1.84 1.40 0.44
4 Colorado CO 1.84 1.40 0.44
5 Utah UT 1.84 1.40 0.44
6 Maryland MD 1.84 1.72 0.12
7 South Carolina SC 1.72 1.32 0.40
8 Nevada NV 1.72 1.40 0.32
9 Oregon OR 1.72 1.40 0.32
10 Florida FL 1.72 1.60 0.12
11 Delaware DE 1.60 1.11 0.49
12 Montana MT 1.60 1.32 0.28
13 Rhode Island RI 1.60 1.32 0.28
14 Virginia VA 1.60 1.40 0.20
15 California CA 1.60 1.72 -0.12
16 Wyoming WY 1.50 1.11 0.39
17 Georgia GA 1.50 1.24 0.26
18 Maine ME 1.50 1.24 0.26
19 North Carolina NC 1.50 1.24 0.26
20 New Mexico NM 1.50 1.50 0.00
21 Washington WA 1.50 1.50 0.00
22 Mississippi MS 1.40 1.11 0.29
23 New Hampshire NH 1.40 1.24 0.16
24 New Jersey NJ 1.40 1.24 0.16
25 Tennessee TN 1.40 1.24 0.16
26 Alaska AK 1.40 1.32 0.08
27 Alabama AL 1.32 1.11 0.21
28 Louisiana LA 1.32 1.11 0.21
29 Oklahoma OK 1.32 1.11 0.21
30 Vermont VT 1.32 1.24 0.08
31 Arkansas AR 1.24 1.11 0.13
32 Indiana IN 1.24 1.11 0.13
33 Iowa IA 1.24 1.11 0.13
34 Kentucky KY 1.24 1.11 0.13
35 Massachusetts MA 1.24 1.11 0.13
36 Michigan MI 1.24 1.11 0.13
37 Minnesota MN 1.24 1.11 0.13
38 Missouri MO 1.24 1.11 0.13
39 Nebraska NE 1.24 1.11 0.13
40 South Dakota SD 1.24 1.11 0.13
41 Texas TX 1.24 1.11 0.13
42 West Virginia WV 1.24 1.11 0.13
43 Wisconsin WI 1.24 1.11 0.13
44 Connecticut CT 1.11 1.11 0.00
45 District of Columbia DC 1.11 1.11 0.00
46 Illinois IL 1.11 1.11 0.00
47 Kansas KS 1.11 1.11 0.00
48 New York NY 1.11 1.11 0.00
49 North Dakota ND 1.11 1.11 0.00
50 Ohio OH 1.11 1.11 0.00
51 Pennsylvania PA 1.11 1.11 0.00

In Hawaii’s case, elevated housing costs push mortgage balances sky-high. In Idaho, a surge of migrants since 2020 has driven up home prices and left many newcomers with large, fresh mortgages.

Rounding out the top five are Arizona, Colorado, and Utah (all 1.84). Once again, fast-growing markets where rising prices and younger populations translate into higher leverage.

Related: Hawaii has the fifth-lowest homeownership rate in the country.
States With the Lowest Household Debt

At the other end of the spectrum, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and North Dakota come in at just 1.11.

Many low-debt states share three traits. They have lower housing costs, older homeowner bases with significant equity, and slower population growth that tempers new borrowing.

However, even high-income states like Connecticut and the District of Columbia can land in this cohort thanks to well-paid residents who keep balances in check.

The gap underscores how regional housing dynamics, more than incomes alone, dictate household debt.

Finally, due to how this ratio is calculated, younger households’ true burden may be understated (student loan exclusion).

At the same time, the income measure is unemployment insurance-covered wages wages (not total personal income), which can overstate the ratio in high-capital-income areas (e.g., states with finance-heavy metros).

Learn More on the Voronoi App

If you enjoyed today’s post, check out Visualizing Government Debt-to-GDP Around the World on Voronoi, the new app from Visual Capitalist.