Global·NewlyNews

Suburban poverty traps America's senior citizens

· Axios

More older Americans are falling into poverty in suburbs built for middle-class stability. Why it matters: Suburbs lack the transit, housing and services that help cushion poverty in cities, leaving millions of seniors at risk of isolation in the neighborhoods they helped build. An Axios analysis of U.S. Census American Community Survey (ACS) data shows millions of older Americans are aging into poverty or near-poverty outside major city cores. Suburban-heavy counties in Arizona, California, Florida and New York already report large populations aged 65+ that are below the poverty line. By the numbers: The U.S. has roughly 60 million people age 65+, per Census estimates — up 34% over the past decade, according to Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies. Growth is fastest in lower-density metro areas, not dense urban cores, the center found . Roughly half of seniors live in suburban-style communities, meaning even modest poverty rates translate into millions struggling outside cities. There's no single Census measure of "suburban senior poverty," meaning the problem is large and likely undercounted. The big picture: Senior poverty has risen in more than 800 counties over the past five years. An estimated 11%–15% of seniors live in poverty — translating to roughly three million to five million older adults in suburban areas, based on an Axios analysis. Poverty growth since 2000 has been concentrated outside urban cores. The fastest-growing age group is 80+ — and they're the most likely to face high housing costs and need paid care, compounding financial strain. Between the lines: This isn't just local. It's a national infrastructure mismatch. Transit deserts: 70% of seniors live where public transportation is limited or nonexistent. Service gaps: Programs like Meals on Wheels and home health care cost more to deliver in spread-out suburbs than dense cities. Zoom in: In 2023 ACS county data, large suburban-heavy...