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Study ranks US states with most financially-distressed residents – see the list

A study recently published by WalletHub ranked each U.S. state by the amount of financially-distressed residents in each. Michigan, Texas and Nevada ranked up top.

A personal finance company recently published a survey on the U.S. states with the most money-worried residents – and the results may surprise you.

WalletHub published its study, titled "States with the Most People in Financial Distress," on July 17. The company said that it used nine key metrics, including credit score changes and Internet searches for "debt" and "loans," to determine the results.

"Our data set includes factors like the average credit score, the change in the number of bankruptcy filings between March 2023 and March 2024, and the share of people with accounts in distress," WalletHub explained.

There were no clear-cut trends concerning different U.S. regions, but the most money-worried states tended to be in the Southeast, while the least financially-distressed were in New England and the Midwest.

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In order of least-to-most financially-distressed residents, WalletHub ranked U.S. states as follows:

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WalletHub discovered that Michigan was the most financially-distressed state after finding, in the first quarter of 2024, that the Great Lakes State had "the most accounts per person in financial distress, meaning accounts where the account holder was temporarily allowed to not make payments due to financial difficulty."

"Michiganians also had the second-highest increase in the share of people with distressed accounts between Q1 2023 and Q1 2024, at over 70%," the study added.

The company added that despite Texas having a $2.4 trillion economy, the Lone Star State followed Michigan.

"However, Texans are having a number of economic struggles, which are demonstrated by the fact that residents had the third-lowest average credit score in the country in Q1 2024," WalletHub reported.

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"Texans also search Google for ‘debt’ and ‘loans’ at a high rate, which shows that many people are desperate to borrow, despite already owing money."

According to WalletHub analyst Cassandra Happe, measuring states by financial distress is an efficient way "to take the pulse of a state and see whether people are generally thriving or having trouble making ends meet."

"When you combine data about people delaying payments with other metrics like bankruptcy filings and credit score changes, it paints a good picture of the overall economic trends of a state," Happe said.

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FOX Business reached out to WalletHub for additional comment, but did not immediately hear back.

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