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  • WSAV News 3

    Study: Here’s what you have to make to be in the top 1% in every state

    By Jeremy TannerSamantha Jarpe,

    1 day ago
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0sTvma_0uXnQpms00

    DENVER (KDVR) – Are you part of the top 1%? Well, it depends heavily on which state you live in, according to a new study by GoBankingRates.

    The study used Internal Revenue Service data from 2021 and 2022 to determine the top 1% threshold was for all states. The amounts were adjusted for inflation.

    Five states — Connecticut, Massachusetts, California, Washington and New Jersey — all require people to earn $1 million or more to be considered part of the 1%.

    The 10 states with the highest incomes needed to be in the 1% of earners:

    1. Connecticut – $1,192,947
    2. Massachusetts – $1,152,992
    3. California – $1,072,248
    4. Washington – $1,024,599
    5. New Jersey – $1,010,101
    6. New York – $999,747
    7. Colorado – $896,273
    8. Florida – $882,302
    9. Wyoming – $872,896
    10. New Hampshire – $839,742

    West Virginia had the lowest income needed to be part of its 1%, at $435,302 a year. That’s less than half of the amount required in all but nine of the top 10 states.

    The 10 states with the lowest threshold to the 1% club:

    41. Ohio – $601,685

    42. Iowa – $591,921

    43. Alabama – $577,017

    44. Indiana – $572,403

    45. Oklahoma – $559,981

    46. Arkansas – $550,469

    47. Kentucky – $532,013

    48. New Mexico – $493,013

    49. Mississippi – $456,309

    50. West Virginia – $435,302

    GoBankingRates used the most recent IRS tax return data (2021 data pulled from 2022 returns) when calculating each state’s figures. More information is available in the study.

    How does the 1% compare to everyone else?

    The U.S. Census Bureau found that the real median household income in 2022 was $74,580. Recent data shows that that number fluctuates dramatically, evidenced by the states on either end of the spectrum, however.

    For a family with one earner, the median is $51,554 in Mississippi, compared to $85,933 in the District of Columbia.

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