Family Living
What the Data Says About the Best ZIP Codes for Families
Family-friendly rankings usually lean on test scores. Census data lets you triangulate something more useful: child population, family income, housing affordability and commute time.
By City Zip Compare Editorial · April 15, 2026 · 8 min read
Every parent searching for where to raise children eventually runs into the same problem: 'best places' lists are dominated by school test scores, which mostly track the income of the parents who already live there. Census data gives you a way to triangulate something more honest.
Five Census signals that capture family fit
Child population share (B01001 age breakdown): high share signals an area built for families. National average is about 22% under age 18; family-dense suburbs run 28–32%.
Family household income (B19119): different from household income — strips out single-person and roommate households. Better signal of school-district economic base.
Owner-occupied family housing (B25115): single-family detached owner-occupied units as a share of stock. High share correlates with stable schools and lower turnover.
Commute time (B08303): under 25 minutes one-way means more time at home with kids. Above 35 minutes is a quiet drag on family life that doesn't show up in any school ranking.
Bachelor's-degree share (B15003): the strongest single predictor of school cohort outcomes — even more than school funding per pupil.
Why high-income coastal suburbs aren't always the answer
A wealthy coastal commuter suburb might have a 35% bachelor's-degree-and-higher share, $180,000 family income, top-decile schools — and a 55-minute average commute and a 35:1 price-to-rent ratio. The arithmetic of family time and family balance sheets pushes you out.
A second-tier Sun Belt suburb (think Cary NC, Frisco TX, Gilbert AZ) might offer 28% degree share, $130,000 family income, top-quintile schools, 22-minute commute, and a 19:1 price-to-rent ratio. The school metric is a notch lower; everything else is materially better. For most families on most budgets, the second profile dominates.
What Census doesn't tell you
Crime data is not in ACS5 — use the FBI's Uniform Crime Reporting program for that. School quality scores are not in ACS5 — use state department of education data or the NCES Common Core. Childcare cost is not directly in ACS5 — Department of Labor county-level data is the best free source.
But income, age structure, housing, education, and commute are all there. Together they give you the demographic foundation any school-quality ranking is sitting on top of.
- ZIP-level data published in: B01001, B19119, B25115, B08303, B15003
- Pair with: NCES school data, FBI UCR crime data, DOL childcare cost data
- Avoid: ranking lists that don't disclose their methodology
Frequently asked
›Why is family household income different from household income?
Family income (B19119) covers only households with two or more related people. It excludes single-person and unrelated-roommate households, which is closer to the population you care about as a parent looking at neighborhood norms.
More in Family Living
Where American Families Cluster: ZIPs With the Highest Child Population Share
Census age tables let you find the ZIPs with the highest concentration of children. The map is dominated by Sun Belt suburbs, Mormon Utah, and a few surprises.
Best States to Raise a Family in 2026 (Census-Backed Ranking)
We rank the best U.S. states to raise a family using Census ACS5 data on family income, housing affordability, child population share, and educational attainment — without the editorial filler.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-year estimates. Data: census.gov/programs-surveys/acs.
