United States - Per capita income in the past 12 months (in 2009 inflation-adjusted dollars), 2005-2009 by State

Data Item
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Per capita income in the past 12 months (in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars), 2006-2010 - (US Dollars)
State Value
Alabama 22,984
Alaska 30,726
Arizona 25,680
Arkansas 21,274
California 29,188
Colorado 30,151
Connecticut 36,775
Delaware 29,007
District of Columbia 42,078
Florida 26,551
Georgia 25,134
Hawaii 28,882
Idaho 22,518
Illinois 28,782
Indiana 24,058
Iowa 25,335
Kansas 25,907
Kentucky 22,515
Louisiana 23,094
Maine 25,385
Maryland 34,849
Massachusetts 33,966
Michigan 25,135
Minnesota 29,582
Mississippi 19,977
Missouri 24,724
Montana 23,836
Nebraska 25,229
Nevada 27,589
New Hampshire 31,422
New Jersey 34,858
New Mexico 22,966
New York 30,948
North Carolina 24,745
North Dakota 25,803
Ohio 25,113
Oklahoma 23,094
Oregon 26,171
Pennsylvania 27,049
Rhode Island 28,707
South Carolina 23,443
South Dakota 24,110
Tennessee 23,722
Texas 24,870
Utah 23,139
Vermont 27,478
Virginia 32,145
Washington 29,733
West Virginia 21,232
Wisconsin 26,624
Wyoming 27,860

Value for the US (US Dollars): $27,334

Data item: Per capita income in the past 12 months (in 2010 inflation-adjusted dollars), 2006-2010

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

Definitions:

Per capita income is the mean money income received in the past 12 months computed for every man, woman, and child in a geographic area. It is derived by dividing the total income of all people 15 years old and over in a geographic area by the total population in that area. Note -- income is not collected for people under 15 years old even though those people are included in the denominator of per capita income. This measure is rounded to the nearest whole dollar.

Money income includes amounts reported separately for wage or salary income; net self-employment income; interest, dividends, or net rental or royalty income or income from estates and trusts; Social Security or Railroad Retirement income; Supplemental Security Income (SSI); public assistance or welfare payments; retirement, survivor, or disability pensions; and all other income.

Receipts from the following sources are not included as income: capital gains, money received from the sale of property (unless the recipient was engaged in the business of selling such property); the value of income “in kind” from food stamps, public housing subsidies, medical care, employer contributions for individuals, etc.; withdrawal of bank deposits; money borrowed; tax refunds; exchange of money between relatives living in the same household; gifts and lump-sum inheritances, insurance payments, and other types of lump-sum receipts.

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.

Since answers to income questions are frequently based on memory and not on records, many people tended to forget minor or sporadic sources of income and, therefore, underreport their income. Underreporting tends to be more pronounced for income sources that are not derived from earnings, such as public assistance, interest, dividends, and net rental income.

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