Texas Poverty Rate by City

Data Item State
Persons in poverty, percent - (Percent)
City Value
Abilene 17.0
Addison 9.7
Alamo 26.7
Alamo Heights 4.7
Aldine 29.6
Alice 25.7
Allen 5.4
Alpine 14.2
Alton 35.2
Alvin 16.2
Amarillo 15.1
Andrews 12.7
Angleton 12.0
Anna 5.4
Anthony 24.4
Aransas Pass 16.2
Arlington 15.7
Atascocita 6.9
Athens 27.3
Atlanta 28.3
Austin 14.5
Azle 7.8
Bacliff 23.3
Balch Springs 19.5
Bastrop 5.5
Bay City 23.4
Baytown 16.0
Beaumont 19.9
Bedford 5.9
Beeville 29.0
Bellaire 1.7
Bellmead 22.3
Belton 17.1
Benbrook 4.6
Big Spring 19.4
Boerne 6.6
Bonham 15.1
Borger 18.1
Bowie 16.2
Brady 18.0
Breckenridge 26.7
Brenham 18.6
Briar 4.3
Bridge City 7.9
Bridgeport 18.1
Brownfield 17.1
Brownsville 31.0
Brownwood 18.6
Brushy Creek 3.5
Bryan 22.6
Buda 3.6
Burkburnett 14.3
Burleson 5.0
Burnet 18.7
Cameron 24.6
Cameron Park 45.3
Camp Swift 12.4
Canutillo 42.6
Canyon 16.0
Canyon Lake 11.1
Carrizo Springs 29.0
Carrollton 9.0
Carthage 19.0
Cedar Hill 10.8
Cedar Park 4.4
Celina 4.7
Center 36.2
Channelview 16.9
Childress 16.1
Cibolo 6.4
Cinco Ranch 4.6
Cleburne 15.2
Cleveland 17.1
Cloverleaf 25.0
Clute 17.7
College Station 30.8
Colleyville 3.2
Commerce 39.7
Conroe 12.8
Converse 8.6
Coppell 3.2
Copperas Cove 12.9
Corinth 6.1
Corpus Christi 15.8
Corsicana 19.8
Crockett 41.1
Crowley 7.2
Crystal City 30.9
Cuero 18.1
Dalhart 11.2
Dallas 20.5
Dayton 10.7
Decatur 20.2
Deer Park 10.3
Del Rio 22.2
Denison 15.0
Denton 17.7
DeSoto 11.9
Dickinson 13.3
Doffing 35.6
Donna 36.8
Dumas 17.3
Duncanville 15.6
Eagle Pass 27.5
Edinburg 25.9
Edna 14.9
Eidson Road 23.2
El Campo 19.7
El Paso 20.0
Elgin 14.2
Elsa 38.8
Ennis 17.3
Euless 10.0
Everman 22.9
Fabens 39.1
Fair Oaks Ranch 3.6
Fairview 3.5
Farmers Branch 7.9
Fate 1.0
Floresville 14.2
Flower Mound 2.9
Forest Hill 25.6
Forney 7.5
Fort Bliss 12.5
Fort Hood 16.2
Fort Stockton 15.1
Fort Worth 16.0
Four Corners 11.1
Fredericksburg 12.6
Freeport 24.3
Fresno 9.8
Friendswood 5.4
Frisco 3.6
Gainesville 24.9
Galena Park 29.4
Galveston 20.8
Garland 14.2
Gatesville 20.3
Georgetown 7.0
Gladewater 29.4
Glenn Heights 14.9
Gonzales 23.0
Graham 13.4
Granbury 11.2
Grand Prairie 12.1
Grapevine 6.7
Greenville 21.5
Groves 11.9
Gun Barrel City 18.3
Haltom City 17.1
Harker Heights 13.3
Harlingen 30.2
Heath 3.8
Helotes 2.8
Hempstead 23.7
Henderson 12.9
Hereford 18.4
Hewitt 6.0
Hidalgo 31.7
Highland Park 2.7
Highland Village 2.3
Highlands 21.0
Hillsboro 21.7
Hitchcock 21.1
Homestead Meadows North 38.6
Homestead Meadows South 32.2
Hondo 7.6
Horizon City 11.6
Hornsby Bend 6.4
Houston 20.6
Humble 20.3
Huntsville 34.4
Hurst 12.8
Hutchins 28.8
Hutto 8.7
Ingleside 9.9
Iowa Park 9.2
Irving 13.5
Jacinto City 24.2
Jacksonville 27.7
Jasper 24.7
Jersey Village 7.7
Joshua 10.6
Katy 6.4
Kaufman 26.8
Keene 13.1
Keller 3.3
Kennedale 6.1
Kermit 17.9
Kerrville 13.5
Kilgore 16.9
Killeen 13.8
Kingsland 12.7
Kingsville 29.7
Kirby 20.7
Kyle 6.1
La Feria 27.7
La Homa 38.5
La Marque 16.4
La Porte 10.7
Lackland AFB 10.3
Lago Vista 4.3
Lake Dallas 13.2
Lake Jackson 8.0
Lakehills 15.7
Lakeway 3.6
Lamesa 24.8
Lampasas 17.2
Lancaster 17.4
Lantana 1.0
Laredo 29.1
League City 6.6
Leander 4.8
Leon Valley 12.0
Levelland 16.3
Lewisville 10.5
Liberty 7.9
Little Elm 6.3
Littlefield 28.8
Live Oak 6.7
Livingston 16.1
Lockhart 12.9
Longview 17.6
Los Fresnos 32.0
Lubbock 20.2
Lucas 4.4
Lufkin 20.9
Luling 30.0
Lumberton 7.8
Manor 15.0
Mansfield 4.1
Manvel 3.9
Marble Falls 8.6
Marlin 44.0
Marshall 20.2
McAllen 24.9
McKinney 6.9
Mercedes 32.9
Mesquite 13.4
Mexia 28.5
Midland 8.6
Midlothian 5.4
Mila Doce 51.7
Mineral Wells 23.9
Mission 24.1
Mission Bend 12.4
Missouri City 5.4
Monahans 13.3
Mount Pleasant 18.5
Muleshoe 11.2
Murillo 27.2
Murphy 4.8
Nacogdoches 31.1
Navasota 21.4
Nederland 6.4
New Braunfels 8.9
North Richland Hills 9.0
Odessa 10.7
Orange 23.8
Palestine 18.5
Palmview 27.9
Palmview South 32.3
Pampa 16.8
Paris 22.7
Pasadena 17.7
Pearland 3.8
Pearsall 18.0
Pecan Grove 5.0
Pecan Plantation 3.5
Pecos 10.2
Perezville 31.2
Perryton 13.1
Pflugerville 5.9
Pharr 28.5
Plainview 19.0
Plano 6.8
Pleasanton 16.8
Port Arthur 27.5
Port Isabel 32.1
Port Lavaca 15.1
Port Neches 11.5
Portland 7.6
Post 20.8
Prairie View 52.5
Princeton 10.9
Progreso 26.9
Prosper 3.6
Raymondville 40.0
Red Oak 8.1
Rendon 6.6
Richardson 10.2
Richland Hills 7.2
Richmond 25.3
Rio Grande City 33.4
River Oaks 11.9
Roanoke 6.4
Robinson 9.2
Robstown 41.1
Rockdale 13.3
Rockport 26.4
Rockwall 5.9
Roma 39.1
Rosenberg 16.5
Round Rock 7.7
Rowlett 6.6
Royse City 6.7
Rusk 13.4
Sachse 3.0
Saginaw 5.3
San Angelo 14.5
San Antonio 18.6
San Benito 36.9
San Juan 31.4
San Marcos 34.4
Sanger 8.4
Santa Fe 10.7
Schertz 6.0
Seabrook 7.3
Seagoville 14.3
Sealy 17.8
Seguin 18.3
Selma 6.9
Seminole 8.5
Shady Hollow 5.4
Sherman 18.5
Sienna Plantation 7.8
Silsbee 26.7
Sinton 36.2
Slaton 17.2
Snyder 14.5
Socorro 26.9
South Houston 20.3
Southlake 2.2
Spring 13.0
Stafford 10.5
Stephenville 26.2
Sugar Land 5.0
Sulphur Springs 22.1
Sunnyvale 1.8
Sweetwater 16.6
Taylor 10.7
Temple 17.1
Terrell 22.0
Texarkana 23.0
Texas City 21.3
The Colony 5.8
The Woodlands 4.0
Timberwood Park 3.8
Tomball 17.3
Trophy Club 2.4
Tyler 19.4
Universal City 9.5
University Park 4.3
Uvalde 14.8
Vernon 19.9
Victoria 17.5
Vidor 19.5
Waco 26.8
Wake Village 15.1
Watauga 10.7
Waxahachie 12.8
Weatherford 9.6
Webster 20.6
Wells Branch 10.7
Weslaco 25.3
West Livingston 22.1
West Odessa 15.7
West University Place 1.7
Wharton 22.4
White Oak 17.9
White Settlement 13.7
Whitehouse 17.3
Wichita Falls 20.3
Willis 10.9
Windcrest 11.8
Woodway 3.7
Wylie 5.9
Yoakum 18.0
Zapata 19.5

Data item: Persons in poverty, percent

QuickFacts uses data from the following sources: National level - Current Population Survey, Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC); State level - American Community Survey (ACS), one-year estimates; County level - The Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE), one-year estimates; Sub-county level: Cities, towns and census designated places; - ACS, five-year estimates; Puerto Rico and its municipios (county-equivalents for Puerto Rico) and its sub-counties (zonas urbanas and comunidades); Puerto Rico Community Survey (PRCS), five-year estimates.

All of these data sources provide estimates at geographic levels other than the ones listed. Below is a chart which provides a summary of the data source recommendations by geographic level. Included in this chart is the Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP), a longitudinal survey (changes in poverty status for the same household over time). Which Data Source to Use

How the Census Bureau measures poverty: The Census Bureau poverty definition - Following the Office of Management and Budget's (OMB) Statistical Policy Directive 14, the Census Bureau uses a set of money income thresholds that vary by family size and composition to determine who is in poverty. If a family's total income is less than the family's threshold, then that family and every individual in it is considered in poverty. The official poverty thresholds do not vary geographically, but they are updated for inflation using Consumer Price Index (CPI-U). The official poverty definition uses money income before taxes and does not include capital gains or noncash benefits (such as public housing, Medicaid, and food stamps). For more information: How the Census Bureau Measures Poverty

For differences between the Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the Current Population Survey poverty estimates and the American Community Survey poverty estimates, see: Fact Sheet - Differences Between CPS ASEC and ACS

Data at a national level - Current Population Survey Annual Social and Economic Supplement (CPS ASEC).

The Annual Social and Economic Supplement to the Current Population Survey (CPS ASEC) provides annual, calendar-year, national estimates of income and official poverty numbers and rates. Census Bureau conducts the ASEC over a 3 month period, in February, March, and April, with most data collection occurring in the month of March. The CPS, sponsored jointly by the Census Bureau and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, is the country's primary source of labor force statistics for the civilian, non-institutional population.

Income and Poverty in the United States
The Supplemental Poverty Measure
Health Insurance Coverage in the United States
Source and Accuracy of Estimates for Income, Poverty, and Health Insurance Coverage

Data at a state level - American Community Survey (ACS), Puerto Rico Community Survey (PRCS), one-year estimates.

The ACS is a nationwide survey designed to provide communities with reliable and timely demographic, social, economic and housing estimates every year. The ACS provides a wide range of important statistics about people and housing for every community across the United States and Puerto Rico, of which this Fact is one. These surveys are the only source of local estimates for most of the 40 topics it covers such as education, occupation, language, ancestry, and housing costs, and provides information for even the smallest communities. Estimates are available for the nation, all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, every congressional district, every metropolitan area, and all counties and places with populations of 65,000 or more. One-year estimates include information collected from independent monthly samples from the previous 12 months.

Data and Documentation, Accuracy of data
Methodology

Data at a county level - Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE)

The U.S. Census Bureau's SAIPE program provides annual estimates of income and poverty statistics for all school districts, counties, and states. The main objective of this program is to provide estimates of income and poverty for the administration of federal programs and the allocation of federal funds to local jurisdictions. In addition to these federal programs, state and local programs use the income and poverty estimates for distributing funds and managing programs.

These estimates combine data from administrative records, postcensal population estimates, and the decennial census with direct estimates from the American Community Survey to provide consistent and reliable single-year estimates.

Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates main page
Frequently asked questions
Methodology

Data at a Sub-county level - American Community Survey (ACS) and Puerto Rico Community Survey (PRCS), five-year estimates.

The ACS and PRCS produce estimates for numerous social, economic and housing characteristics including language, education, the commute to work, employment, mortgage status and rent, as well as income, poverty and health insurance. A multi-year estimate is simply a period estimate that encompasses more than one calendar year. While a one-year estimate includes information collected from independent monthly samples from the previous 12 months, a five-year estimate includes information collected over a 60-month period. These estimates are available for all areas regardless of population size, down to the block group.

Data and Documentation, Accuracy of data
Methodology