{"title":"Whitest States","shortName":null,"slug":"whitest-states","status":"Active","lastUpdated":"2026-03-30","type":"States","regionCount":null,"mapMinHeight":250,"mapImageUrl":"https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/wE6rP/full.png","fancyMapUrl":null,"imageExtension":".png","mapSource":"custom","excerpt":"Ranked with 2023 Census data, the whitest states range from Maine at 90% to Hawaii at 22%, and the gap is shaped by settlement history, not just geography.","indexable":true,"category":{"name":"Demographics","slug":"demographics"},"regions":[{"name":"California","identifier":"california-us-state"},{"name":"Texas","identifier":"texas-us-state"},{"name":"Florida","identifier":"florida-us-state"},{"name":"New York","identifier":"new-york-us-state"},{"name":"Pennsylvania","identifier":"pennsylvania-us-state"},{"name":"Ohio","identifier":"ohio-us-state"},{"name":"Illinois","identifier":"illinois-us-state"},{"name":"Michigan","identifier":"michigan-us-state"},{"name":"North Carolina","identifier":"north-carolina-us-state"},{"name":"Georgia","identifier":"georgia-us-state"},{"name":"Washington","identifier":"washington-us-state"},{"name":"Virginia","identifier":"virginia-us-state"},{"name":"New Jersey","identifier":"new-jersey-us-state"},{"name":"Indiana","identifier":"indiana-us-state"},{"name":"Arizona","identifier":"arizona-us-state"},{"name":"Tennessee","identifier":"tennessee-us-state"},{"name":"Massachusetts","identifier":"massachusetts-us-state"},{"name":"Missouri","identifier":"missouri-us-state"},{"name":"Wisconsin","identifier":"wisconsin-us-state"},{"name":"Colorado","identifier":"colorado-us-state"},{"name":"Minnesota","identifier":"minnesota-us-state"},{"name":"Kentucky","identifier":"kentucky-us-state"},{"name":"South Carolina","identifier":"south-carolina-us-state"},{"name":"Oregon","identifier":"oregon-us-state"},{"name":"Alabama","identifier":"alabama-us-state"},{"name":"Maryland","identifier":"maryland-us-state"},{"name":"Oklahoma","identifier":"oklahoma-us-state"},{"name":"Utah","identifier":"utah-us-state"},{"name":"Louisiana","identifier":"louisiana-us-state"},{"name":"Iowa","identifier":"iowa-us-state"},{"name":"Connecticut","identifier":"connecticut-us-state"},{"name":"Kansas","identifier":"kansas-us-state"},{"name":"Arkansas","identifier":"arkansas-us-state"},{"name":"Nevada","identifier":"nevada-us-state"},{"name":"Idaho","identifier":"idaho-us-state"},{"name":"Mississippi","identifier":"mississippi-us-state"},{"name":"Nebraska","identifier":"nebraska-us-state"},{"name":"West Virginia","identifier":"west-virginia-us-state"},{"name":"New Mexico","identifier":"new-mexico-us-state"},{"name":"Maine","identifier":"maine-us-state"},{"name":"New Hampshire","identifier":"new-hampshire-us-state"},{"name":"Montana","identifier":"montana-us-state"},{"name":"Rhode Island","identifier":"rhode-island-us-state"},{"name":"South Dakota","identifier":"south-dakota-us-state"},{"name":"North Dakota","identifier":"north-dakota-us-state"},{"name":"Delaware","identifier":"delaware-us-state"},{"name":"Hawaii","identifier":"hawaii-us-state"},{"name":"Vermont","identifier":"vermont-us-state"},{"name":"Wyoming","identifier":"wyoming-us-state"},{"name":"Alaska","identifier":"alaska-us-state"}],"content":[{"tocTitle":"The Range","contentTitle":"Maine, West Virginia, and Vermont Are All Above 89% White","content":"```\nThe whitest states in America are small, rural, and clustered in the northern corners of the country. According to the [2023 American Community Survey](https://data.census.gov/table/ACSDP1Y2023.DP05?q=White&g=010XX00US$0400000&y=2023) published by the U.S. Census Bureau, **Maine** and **West Virginia** share the top spot at **90.1%** white alone. **Vermont** follows immediately behind at 89.9%.\n\nThe ranking measures \"white alone,\" which counts only people who selected White as their sole racial identity on the Census form. It does not include people who selected White in combination with another race. That distinction matters, and the gap between the two measures varies dramatically by state.\n\nBelow Vermont, the rest of the top tier is similarly Northern and rural: **New Hampshire** at 87.5%, **Montana** at 84.6%, **Wyoming** at 84.3%, and **Iowa** at 84.2%. At the opposite end, **Hawaii** anchors the bottom at 21.9%. **California** sits second-to-last at 38.5%. **New Mexico** (47.5%), **Texas** (47.7%), and **Maryland** (47.9%) round out the five least white states.\n\nMost states fall between 55% and 80%, with neither end of the spectrum dramatically outweighing the other. But the regional divide is sharp. The **Midwest** averages **76.9%** white alone. The Northeast averages 72.5%. The West and South are nearly identical at 62.6% each. That 14-point gap between the Midwest and the other end of the country reflects patterns of settlement and migration that go back centuries.\n```","order":1,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"Why They're So White","contentTitle":"The States at the Top Are Rural, Northern, and Geographically Isolated","content":"```\nThe states that rank highest are not just white. They are places that, for structural reasons, were never exposed to the migration patterns that diversified the rest of the country.\n\n**Maine** is the most rural state in the nation: roughly 61% of its population lives outside urban areas. Its earliest settlers came from Massachusetts and England, and its location in the far northeastern corner of the country, bordered only by New Hampshire and the Atlantic, limited subsequent immigration. During the Great Migration, when millions of Black Americans moved from the South to northern industrial cities, Maine had no industrial base large enough to serve as a destination. Its economy was built on forestry, fishing, and small-scale farming, not the factories and mills that drew diverse workers to cities like Detroit, Chicago, and Philadelphia.\n\n**West Virginia** tells a parallel story through a different geography. The Appalachian Mountains isolated the region from the plantation economy that shaped the rest of Virginia. By 1860, enslaved people made up only **4%** of the population in the territory that would become West Virginia. The coal industry attracted some European immigrants and Black workers from the South in the early 20th century, but when coal declined, so did the population. West Virginia has experienced net out-migration for decades. The people who left tended to be younger and more diverse, reinforcing the state's homogeneity over time.\n\nThe Midwest's position at the top of the regional averages follows a similar logic. States like **Iowa**, **North Dakota**, **Wisconsin**, and **Nebraska** were settled predominantly by Scandinavian and German immigrants in the 19th century. They lacked major port cities or industrial hubs that later drew immigrants from Latin America, Asia, and the Caribbean. Their agricultural economies required fewer workers than manufacturing, and their distance from the southern border limited Hispanic immigration relative to the West and Southwest.\n```","order":2,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"The Count vs. Percent Paradox","contentTitle":"California Has More White Residents Than Any Other State. It Is Also One of the Least White.","content":"```\nThe states with the most white people are, counterintuitively, among the least white by percentage. This is the clearest pattern in the data and the one most likely to surprise readers scanning the table.\n\n**California** has roughly **15 million** residents who identify as white alone, more than any other state. **Texas** is second at 14.6 million. **Florida** follows at 12.5 million, then **New York** at 10.8 million and **Pennsylvania** at 9.6 million. Together, these five states account for **30.9%** of all white Americans.\n\nBut in percentage terms, none of them except Pennsylvania (74%) crack the top half of the ranking. California sits near the bottom at 38.5%. Texas is at 47.7%. The explanation is straightforward: these are the most populous states in the country, and their population growth over the past half-century has been driven overwhelmingly by non-white residents.\n\nCalifornia's white share has dropped from **76.3%** in 1970 to 38.5% in 2023, one of the steepest demographic shifts of any state. Between 2010 and 2020, [the Texas state demographer](https://demographics.texas.gov/) reported that **95.3%** of the state's population growth came from minority populations. In 2023, Latinos officially became the largest demographic group in Texas, surpassing the non-Hispanic white population.\n\nThe pattern is not about white people leaving. It is about who is arriving and who is being born. Immigration, birth rate differentials, and domestic migration into Sun Belt states have all contributed to a demographic landscape where the states that contain the most white residents are also the states where those residents are the smallest share of the total.\n```","order":3,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"The Hawaii Outlier","contentTitle":"Hawaii Has Never Had a White Majority","content":"```\n**Hawaii** is the only state in the dataset where white residents, by any measure, are a clear minority. At 21.9% white alone, it sits more than 16 percentage points below the next-lowest state. But even the broader \"total white\" measure, which includes multiracial individuals who selected white among other races, only reaches 44.3%. That **22.4 percentage-point gap** between the two measures is the largest of any state and reflects Hawaii's extraordinary multiracial demographics.\n\nThe reason is historical. When American sugar planters expanded operations across the islands in the mid-1800s, they recruited laborers from China, Japan, Korea, and the Philippines. The influx was massive. By 1893, according to [Pew Research Center](https://www.pewresearch.org/), Chinese and Japanese male workers alone constituted **51.9%** of Hawaii's population. Many stayed, married, and built families. Today, Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders collectively make up roughly 51% of the state's residents.\n\nHawaii's multiracial identification rate is **eight times** the national average. This is why the gap between white alone and total white is so wide: a substantial share of Hawaii's population identifies as white in combination with Native Hawaiian, Asian, or Pacific Islander heritage, rather than white alone.\n\n**Oklahoma** shows a smaller but structurally similar pattern. Its white alone percentage is 64.6%, but its total white figure is 78.8%, a **14.2-point gap**. The difference is largely explained by mixed white and Native American identification: Oklahoma has one of the largest Native American populations in the country, and intermarriage across that line has been common for generations.\n```","order":4,"faqs":[]},{"tocTitle":"Reading the Data","contentTitle":"What \"White Alone\" Actually Means in Census Data","content":"```\nThe Census Bureau defines \"White\" as people with origins in Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa. That definition includes both Hispanic and non-Hispanic individuals, though demographic reporting often distinguishes between the two. A person who identifies as Hispanic and white simultaneously is counted in the \"white alone\" numbers in this dataset.\n\nThe more significant caveat is a measurement one. In 2020, the Census Bureau [overhauled how it processes race responses](https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2021/08/improved-race-ethnicity-measures-reveal-united-states-population-much-more-multiracial.html). It expanded the write-in character limit from 30 to 200 characters, began coding up to six race groups per response field instead of two, and broadened its code lists for detailed racial categories. The practical effect was dramatic: identification as Two or More Races surged by **276%** between 2010 and 2020.\n\nThat surge came directly at the expense of single-race categories, especially white alone. The national white-alone population count fell by **8.6%** between 2010 and 2020, the first absolute decline ever recorded. But the Census Bureau has cautioned that much of this shift reflects improved data collection, not an actual population change. People who previously checked only \"White\" are now providing more detailed, multiracial responses because the form makes it easier to do so.\n\nThe broader trend is still real. The non-Hispanic white share of the U.S. population fell from 63.7% in 2010 to 57.8% in 2020, the first time it dropped below 60%. According to the [Brookings Institution](https://www.brookings.edu/articles/new-census-data-shows-the-nation-is-diversifying-even-faster-than-predicted/), all of the nation's population growth between 2010 and 2020 came from people of color: the Hispanic population grew 23%, the Asian-alone population grew over 35%, and the multiracial population nearly quadrupled. The \"whitest states\" still sit well above the national average, but the national average itself is shifting beneath them.\n```","order":5,"faqs":[]}],"metrics":[{"name":"White Alone Percent","shortName":"White Alone %","context":"% of population that identifies as white only, not including multiracial individuals.","type":"Choropleth","inverted":false,"mapColorScheme":"pink","mapInterpolation":"linear","colorOverwrite":"","summary":"average","measurement":{"id":"recmEHiSLgGFVCmIH","name":"Percentage","symbol":"%","showMap":true,"showText":true},"dataset":[{"id":"recy2KP6zQmRu3X6L","year":2023,"sources":[{"name":"2023 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates","link":"https://data.census.gov/table/ACSDP1Y2023.DP05?q=White&g=010XX00US$0400000&y=2023","lastUpdated":"2023","organization":{"name":"U.S. Census Bureau","url":"https://www.census.gov"}}],"summary":{"label":"National 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