2025 ALICE Report

42% of households in Coastal and Western CT earn incomes below the cost of living threshold.

 

ALICE families have been overlooked and undercounted by traditional poverty measures. ALICE is the nation’s child care workers, home health aides and cashiers heralded during the pandemic – those working low-wage jobs, with little or no savings and one emergency away from poverty.

In 2023, according to the Federal Poverty Level (FPL), 11% of Connecticut households were financially insecure. Yet this measure failed to account for an additional 29% of households that were also experiencing financial hardship. These households are ALICE: Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed — with income above the FPL, but not enough to afford basic expenses in the planning region where they live.

Between ALICE households and those living in poverty, an estimated 40% of households in Connecticut were below the ALICE Threshold in 2023. Households below the Threshold are forced to make impossible choices — like deciding whether to pay for utilities or a car repair, whether to buy food or fill a prescription.

2025 Update on Financial Hardship

 

ALICE in the Crosscurrents: COVID and Financial Hardship in Connecticut

 

Households below the ALICE Threshold are in every state and planning region across the U.S. and represent all demographic groups. Workers below the ALICE Threshold often perform the jobs that keep our economy functioning smoothly — they are child care providers, food service workers, cashiers, personal care aides, delivery drivers, and more. Their stories capture the systemic and structural barriers to financial stability, and the struggles and resilience of families experiencing financial hardship.

To read the ALICE report and access online, interactive dashboards that provide data on financial hardship at the state, county and local level, visit https://www.unitedforalice.org/introducing-ALICE/Connecticut.

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The Cost of Basics Outpaces Wages

The Household Survival Budget reflects the minimum cost to live and work in today’s economy and includes housing, child care, food, transportation, health care, and technology, plus taxes and a 10% miscellaneous category. This budget is the basis for determining whether households are above or below the ALICE Threshold by planning region. To see costs for different household compositions and locations in Connecticut, visit https://www.unitedforalice.org/the-cost-of-basics/connecticut

To download the United Way Coastal and Western CT Catchment page, click HERE.