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Massachusetts Is The Most Expensive State To Raise A Kid In, Mississippi Cheapest

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Massachusetts Is The Most Expensive State To Raise A Kid In, Mississippi Cheapest

Although costs vary from family to family, two working parents spend an average of around $23,000 per year raising one child in the United States.

This graphic, via Visual Capitalist’s Bruno Venditti, illustrates the cost of raising a child by state, based on data compiled by SmartAsset as of February 2024.

Methodology

SmartAsset used the MIT Living Wage Calculator to compare the living costs of a household with two working adults and one child to those of a childless household with two working adults. Costs include expenses for food, housing, childcare, healthcare, transportation, and other necessities.

Massachusetts Tops the List

Massachusetts has the highest annual costs for raising a child, at $35,841 per year. Mississippi has the lowest annual costs, at $16,151 per year.

Rank State Annual cost of raising a child
1 Massachusetts $35,841
2 Hawaii $35,049
3 Connecticut $32,803
4 Colorado $30,425
5 New York $30,247
6 California $29,468
7 New Hampshire $27,849
8 Washington $27,806
9 Rhode Island $27,630
10 Minnesota $27,406
11 Vermont $27,170
12 Nevada $26,914
13 New Jersey $26,870
14 Alaska $26,860
15 Oregon $26,334
16 Delaware $25,867
17 Maine $24,917
18 Maryland $24,830
19 Pennsylvania $24,820
20 Wisconsin $24,064
21 Virginia $24,043
22 Arizona $24,026
23 Illinois $23,821
24 Michigan $23,075
25 Ohio $22,926
26 Nebraska $22,773
27 Iowa $22,714
28 North Dakota $21,645
29 Indiana $21,584
30 North Carolina $21,510
31 Florida $21,384
32 Idaho $21,214
33 Utah $20,955
34 Montana $20,839
35 Texas $20,724
36 Wyoming $20,579
37 Georgia $20,480
38 South Carolina $20,293
39 New Mexico $20,060
40 Missouri $19,995
41 West Virginia $19,558
42 Oklahoma $19,535
43 Tennessee $19,525
44 Kansas $19,494
45 South Dakota $19,008
46 Alabama $18,653
47 Kentucky $18,588
48 Louisiana $17,918
49 Arkansas $17,424
50 Mississippi $16,151

Regardless of the state, childcare is the highest expense, followed by additional housing and food costs.

Housing costs include expenses for shelter (e.g., mortgage payments, property taxes, rent, and insurance), utilities (gas, electricity, fuel, cellphone, and water), and household furnishings and equipment. Childcare costs include education expenses, daycare tuition, babysitting, other childcare costs, and tuition for private schools.

These expenses do not account for the cost of a college education, which can add significantly to the overall financial burden.

If you enjoyed this post, be sure to check out this graphic, which ranks the income a family needs to live comfortably in every U.S. state.

Tyler Durden
Sat, 12/21/2024 – 15:45

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