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Home›Live Data›State Economic Snapshot

State Economic Snapshot (2026)

Unemployment, median household income, house-price appreciation, and regional inflation — one row per U.S. state, sourced from FRED, BLS, and FHFA.

Written by Jere Salmisto·Reviewed by CalcFi Editorial·Last reviewed 2026-05-21·Methodology

Unemployment figures[1] come from BLS LAUS via FRED and refresh monthly with a two-to-three week lag. Real median household income[2] uses Census ACS 1-year estimates (also hosted on FRED). House-price YoY[3]is FHFA's All-Transactions HPI, refreshed quarterly. Inflation[4] is BLS CPI-U at the 4-Census-region level (Northeast, Midwest, South, West) — BLS does not publish state-level CPI, so we map each state to its Census region and carry that vintage string explicitly in the source URL.

Lowest Unemployment

Hawaii

2.2%

Highest Unemployment

District of Columbia

5.6%

Highest Median HH Income

Massachusetts

$113,900

Data Last Updated

2026-05-21

Latest primary-source fetch

State Economic Indicators — Ranked

RankState Unemp % Median HHI ▼HPI YoY % CPI YoY % (region) Labor Force Part.
1Massachusetts(Northeast)4.7%[1]$113,900[2]+4.3%[3]+3.3%[4]65.5%
2New Hampshire(Northeast)3.2%[1]$111,800[2]+5.6%[3]+3.3%[4]64.6%
3Maryland(South)4.3%[1]$109,700[2]+2.8%[3]+2.8%[4]64.5%
4Colorado(West)3.9%[1]$106,500[2]+1.3%[3]+2.7%[4]68.2%
5District of Columbia(South)5.6%[1]$106,290[2]+1.6%[3]+2.8%[4]69.4%
6Utah(West)3.8%[1]$104,000[2]+2.9%[3]+2.7%[4]69.8%
7New Jersey(Northeast)5.2%[1]$103,500[2]+6.0%[3]+3.3%[4]64.0%
8California(West)5.4%[1]$100,600[2]+1.2%[3]+2.7%[4]62.6%
9Connecticut(Northeast)4.5%[1]$99,240[2]+5.8%[3]+3.3%[4]64.7%
10Hawaii(West)2.2%[1]$98,240[2]+7.1%[3]+2.7%[4]60.6%
11Washington(West)4.8%[1]$94,600[2]+1.8%[3]+2.7%[4]63.4%
12Minnesota(Midwest)4.4%[1]$92,350[2]+3.3%[3]+3.3%[4]68.1%
13Rhode Island(Northeast)4.5%[1]$92,290[2]+5.3%[3]+3.3%[4]63.9%
14Alaska(West)4.8%[1]$91,260[2]+5.9%[3]+2.7%[4]62.0%
15Maine(Northeast)3.3%[1]$90,730[2]+5.5%[3]+3.3%[4]60.2%
16Virginia(South)3.1%[1]$89,930[2]+4.2%[3]+2.8%[4]63.9%
17Oregon(West)5.2%[1]$89,700[2]+2.0%[3]+2.7%[4]61.3%
18North Dakota(Midwest)2.6%[1]$88,080[2]+4.9%[3]+3.3%[4]69.5%
19Kansas(Midwest)3.9%[1]$87,690[2]+4.2%[3]+3.3%[4]66.0%
20New York(Northeast)4.6%[1]$86,830[2]+6.3%[3]+3.3%[4]60.4%
21Nebraska(Midwest)3.0%[1]$86,140[2]+3.6%[3]+3.3%[4]68.3%
22Delaware(South)5.4%[1]$85,860[2]+5.4%[3]+2.8%[4]61.3%
23Iowa(Midwest)3.4%[1]$85,480[2]+4.0%[3]+3.3%[4]67.3%
24Vermont(Northeast)2.7%[1]$85,260[2]+4.8%[3]+3.3%[4]62.0%
25Arizona(West)4.5%[1]$84,700[2]+1.7%[3]+2.7%[4]61.1%
26Illinois(Midwest)4.9%[1]$84,210[2]+6.4%[3]+3.3%[4]64.4%
27Montana(West)3.6%[1]$81,920[2]+2.0%[3]+2.7%[4]62.5%
28Idaho(West)3.7%[1]$81,650[2]+2.0%[3]+2.7%[4]62.9%
29Texas(South)4.3%[1]$81,490[2]+1.1%[3]+2.8%[4]64.7%
30Georgia(South)3.5%[1]$81,210[2]+2.9%[3]+2.8%[4]62.9%
31Nevada(West)5.3%[1]$80,590[2]+1.6%[3]+2.7%[4]61.8%
32Ohio(Midwest)4.3%[1]$80,520[2]+5.1%[3]+3.3%[4]62.7%
33Pennsylvania(Northeast)4.3%[1]$80,060[2]+5.5%[3]+3.3%[4]62.3%
34South Dakota(Midwest)2.2%[1]$79,850[2]+3.7%[3]+3.3%[4]68.7%
35Michigan(Midwest)5.0%[1]$79,460[2]+5.6%[3]+3.3%[4]61.8%
36Missouri(Midwest)3.9%[1]$78,390[2]+4.1%[3]+3.3%[4]63.3%
37South Carolina(South)4.9%[1]$76,780[2]+3.7%[3]+2.8%[4]58.9%
38Indiana(Midwest)3.4%[1]$76,710[2]+4.4%[3]+3.3%[4]63.6%
39Tennessee(South)3.5%[1]$75,860[2]+3.1%[3]+2.8%[4]61.7%
40Wisconsin(Midwest)3.2%[1]$75,670[2]+4.3%[3]+3.3%[4]65.2%
41Florida(South)4.5%[1]$75,630[2]+0.0%[3]+2.8%[4]59.6%
42Wyoming(West)3.4%[1]$72,060[2]+3.0%[3]+2.7%[4]64.3%
43North Carolina(South)3.8%[1]$67,220[2]+3.2%[3]+2.8%[4]61.9%
44Alabama(South)2.7%[1]$65,560[2]+3.5%[3]+2.8%[4]57.3%
45Oklahoma(South)3.9%[1]$65,310[2]+3.4%[3]+2.8%[4]62.1%
46Arkansas(South)4.4%[1]$64,840[2]+4.0%[3]+2.8%[4]57.3%
47Kentucky(South)4.3%[1]$64,790[2]+4.5%[3]+2.8%[4]57.7%
48New Mexico(West)4.5%[1]$64,140[2]+2.8%[3]+2.7%[4]57.6%
49Louisiana(South)4.3%[1]$60,740[2]+4.0%[3]+2.8%[4]58.5%
50Mississippi(South)3.6%[1]$55,980[2]+4.4%[3]+2.8%[4]54.9%
51West Virginia(South)4.4%[1]$55,948[2]+4.3%[3]+2.8%[4]54.7%

CPI is published by BLS at the 4 Census regions (Northeast / Midwest / South / West), not per-state. Each row shows the CPI YoY for that state's Census region.

What the Numbers Mean

Unemployment Spread

State unemployment rates cluster tightly in expansions (2–5%) and spread out sharply during recessions. A gap of 2+ percentage points between the tightest and loosest state labor markets usually signals sector concentration — resource-dependent states swing harder on energy cycles.

Income vs HPI Appreciation

FHFA HPI captures repeat-sales price changes for conforming-loan properties, giving a cleaner signal than Zillow ZHVI for measuring appreciation. States where HPI YoY is running well above CPI see real wealth gains for homeowners — but affordability deteriorates. Cross-reference with state ZHVI home values and BEA RPP to triangulate.

Why Regional CPI?

BLS publishes CPI at four Census regions (and at ~20 metro areas monthly / bi-monthly) but not at the state level. Using the regional CPI is the most rigorous proxy — we label it clearly on every row so you know it's not a fabricated state-level figure.

Related Data

Household Income by State

Percentile + national benchmarks

Home Prices by State

Zillow ZHVI state-level home values

Current Interest Rates

Treasury curve + Fed funds + PMMS

Cost of Living by State

BEA RPP all-items + housing

Energy Prices by State

EIA electricity, natgas, gasoline

States With No Income Tax

Tax-burden snapshot

How we compute this — methodology

This page calls listStateMacro() from the CalcFi data repository. Every field carries a per-SourcedValue source.urlpointing to its FRED or BLS landing page, plus a vintage string (e.g. “Census Region: South” for the CPI field) that flows into the source entries below.

Refresh cadence:BLS LAUS unemployment and LFPR refresh monthly; ACS median household income refreshes annually (Sept releases); FHFA HPI refreshes quarterly; BLS CPI refreshes monthly. The visible “Last reviewed” equals the most recent retrievedAt across all of those.

Known limits: real-vs-nominal confusion is common here — the income column uses real (inflation-adjusted) dollars (FRED series suffixA672N), so year-over-year comparisons are already CPI-adjusted. HPI YoY is a nominal change; subtract CPI YoY to get real appreciation.

Sources

  1. FRED / BLS LAUS — State Unemployment Rate — State-level unemployment rate from BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics (LAUS). fred.stlouisfed.org/release?rid=118. Retrieved 2026-05-21. License: Public domain (Federal Reserve / BLS).
  2. FRED — Real Median Household Income by State (MEHOINUS{ABBR}A672N) — Census ACS 1-year estimates, real dollars. fred.stlouisfed.org/release/tables?rid=249. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  3. FRED — FHFA All-Transactions House Price Index by State — Year-over-year % change, latest quarter. fred.stlouisfed.org/release?rid=197. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  4. BLS — Consumer Price Index (Census region series CUUR01–04) — CPI-U published at 4 Census regions — Northeast / Midwest / South / West. www.bls.gov/regions/home.htm. Retrieved 2026-05-21.

CalcFi does not sell data. If you spot an error, email hello@calcfi.app with the URL and the correct figure.