United States - Households, 2005-2009 by State

Data Item
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See also: County-level map

Chart.
Households, 2006-2010 - (Number)
State Value
Alabama 1,821,210
Alaska 248,248
Arizona 2,326,468
Arkansas 1,117,154
California 12,392,852
Colorado 1,918,959
Connecticut 1,359,218
Delaware 331,639
District of Columbia 257,317
Florida 7,152,844
Georgia 3,468,704
Hawaii 442,267
Idaho 570,283
Illinois 4,769,951
Indiana 2,465,402
Iowa 1,215,954
Kansas 1,101,672
Kentucky 1,676,708
Louisiana 1,641,165
Maine 551,125
Maryland 2,121,047
Massachusetts 2,512,552
Michigan 3,843,997
Minnesota 2,085,917
Mississippi 1,081,052
Missouri 2,349,955
Montana 401,328
Nebraska 711,771
Nevada 979,621
New Hampshire 513,804
New Jersey 3,176,069
New Mexico 756,112
New York 7,205,740
North Carolina 3,626,179
North Dakota 276,642
Ohio 4,552,270
Oklahoma 1,421,705
Oregon 1,499,267
Pennsylvania 4,940,581
Rhode Island 410,305
South Carolina 1,741,994
South Dakota 315,468
Tennessee 2,443,475
Texas 8,539,206
Utah 859,158
Vermont 256,612
Virginia 2,974,481
Washington 2,577,375
West Virginia 740,874
Wisconsin 2,274,611
Wyoming 217,688

Value for the US (Number): 114,235,996

Data item: Households, 2006-2010

Source: U. S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey, 5-Year Estimates. Updated every year. http://factfinder2.census.gov

Definition:

A household includes all the persons who occupy a housing unit as their usual place of residence. A housing unit is a house, an apartment, a mobile home, a group of rooms, or a single room that is occupied (or if vacant, is intended for occupancy) as separate living quarters. Separate living quarters are those in which the occupants live and eat separately from any other persons in the building and which have direct access from outside the building or through a common hall. The occupants may be a single family, one person living alone, two or more families living together, or any other group of related or unrelated persons who share living arrangements. (People not living in households are classified as living in group quarters.)

Persons per household, or average household size, is obtained by dividing the number of persons in households by the number of households (or householders).

Scope and Methodology:

These data are collected in the American Community Survey (ACS). The data are estimates and are subject to sampling variability. The data for each geographic area are presented together with margins of error at factfinder2.census.gov. The data are period estimates, that is, they represent the characteristics of the population over a specific 60-month data collection period.

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