Federal Reserve Economic Data

Table Data - Mean Adjusted Gross Income for Florida

Title Mean Adjusted Gross Income for Florida
Series ID MEANAGIFL12A052NCEN
Source U.S. Census Bureau
Release Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates
Seasonal Adjustment Not Seasonally Adjusted
Frequency Annual
Units Dollars
Date Range 1989-01-01 to 2021-01-01
Last Updated 2023-12-14 1:13 PM CST
Notes The U.S. Census Bureau provides annual estimates of income and poverty statistics for all school districts, counties, and states through the Small Area Income and Poverty Estimates (SAIPE) program. The bureau's main objective with this program is to provide estimates of income and poverty for the administration of federal programs and the allocation of federal funds to local jurisdictions. In addition to these federal programs, state and local programs use the income and poverty estimates for distributing funds and managing programs.

Mean adjusted gross income from aggregated state IRS data is one of the data sources used in producing SAIPE program estimates, defined as the aggregate adjusted gross income divided by the number of returns. These data may not match data from other sources due to differences in definitions, since the SAIPE program only uses tax returns for the relevant income year (IRS/SOI include all tax returns filed in a calendar year in their tabulations, regardless of the reference income year).

See more details about SAIPE Model Input Data.
DATE VALUE
1989-01-01 29823
1990-01-01 30194
1991-01-01 30022
1992-01-01 31514
1993-01-01 31918
1994-01-01 32899
1995-01-01 34668
1996-01-01 36990
1997-01-01 39232
1998-01-01 42456
1999-01-01 47530
2000-01-01 50605
2001-01-01 48192
2002-01-01 47560
2003-01-01 48387
2004-01-01 53972
2005-01-01 60471
2006-01-01 63065
2007-01-01 58017
2008-01-01 55856
2009-01-01 51093
2010-01-01 50946
2011-01-01 52715
2012-01-01 60476
2013-01-01 58783
2014-01-01 63897
2015-01-01 66569
2016-01-01 64872
2017-01-01 71072
2018-01-01 76923
2019-01-01 73849
2020-01-01 77677
2021-01-01 98000

Subscribe to the FRED newsletter


Follow us

Back to Top