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Most and Least Educated Counties in America

Falls Church city, Virginia, Virginia leads the nation with 79.7% of adults holding a bachelor's degree or higher. Jenkins County, Georgia, Georgia records just 7.8%. That 71.9 percentage-point gap is one of the sharpest divides in U.S. demographic data, shaping median incomes, civic participation, and long-term economic trajectory county by county.

The Most Educated Counties in America

The highest bachelor's degree attainment rates cluster around major university campuses, federal research hubs, and high-income suburban rings around large metros. The national median BA rate across counties with populations above 5,000 is 21.5%.

  1. Falls Church city, Virginia: 79.7% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  2. Arlington County, Virginia: 77.1% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  3. Los Alamos County, New Mexico: 68.2% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  4. Alexandria city, Virginia: 65.8% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  5. San Miguel County, Colorado: 65.2% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  6. Howard County, Maryland: 64.5% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  7. Fairfax County, Virginia: 64.3% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  8. Loudoun County, Virginia: 64.0% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  9. New York County, New York: 64.0% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  10. Pitkin County, Colorado: 64.0% with a bachelor's degree or higher

The Least Educated Counties in America

At the other end, counties with the lowest BA attainment rates tend to be rural, economically isolated, or historically underserved by higher education infrastructure. Many of these counties also post below-average high school graduation rates, indicating compounding barriers to educational access across the pipeline.

  1. McDowell County, West Virginia: 5.7% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  2. Kusilvak Census Area, Alaska: 5.8% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  3. Elliott County, Kentucky: 6.2% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  4. Newton County, Texas: 6.2% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  5. Lee County, Arkansas: 6.9% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  6. Reeves County, Texas: 6.9% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  7. Duval County, Texas: 7.0% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  8. Wolfe County, Kentucky: 7.4% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  9. Lee County, Kentucky: 7.5% with a bachelor's degree or higher
  10. Jenkins County, Georgia: 7.8% with a bachelor's degree or higher

High School Graduation: A Separate Divide

Bachelor's degree rates capture one layer of educational attainment, but high school completion tells a different story about foundational access. The national median HS graduation rate is 89.6%. The counties with the lowest rates illustrate where foundational barriers begin:

  1. Holmes County, Ohio: 57.1% high school graduate or higher
  2. Gaines County, Texas: 58.3% high school graduate or higher
  3. Starr County, Texas: 60.1% high school graduate or higher
  4. LaGrange County, Indiana: 60.6% high school graduate or higher
  5. Maricao Municipio, Puerto Rico: 60.6% high school graduate or higher
  6. La Salle County, Texas: 63.9% high school graduate or higher
  7. Zapata County, Texas: 64.1% high school graduate or higher
  8. Wolfe County, Kentucky: 66.0% high school graduate or higher
  9. Presidio County, Texas: 66.1% high school graduate or higher
  10. Brooks County, Texas: 67.4% high school graduate or higher

Education and Income: What the Data Shows

Across U.S. counties, BA attainment and median household income move together closely. Falls Church city's 79.7% college attainment rate corresponds to a median household income of $154,734. Jenkins County's 7.8% rate corresponds to $36,906. The relationship is not perfectly causal, but at the county level the correlation is consistent enough that education attainment functions as a reliable leading indicator of economic conditions.

Why County-Level Data Matters

National averages for education mask the concentration of both attainment and under-attainment in specific places. College towns inflate state averages. Remote rural counties with limited access to two-year or four-year institutions depress them. Examining the county-level distribution reveals where education gaps are most acute, which communities are being left behind in the knowledge economy, and where targeted investment in community colleges, broadband access, and workforce training could have the greatest impact.

Data source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates
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