Pennsylvania

How much must you earn in PA to be middle class? New report gives income range

Here’s what’s considered a middle class and upper-middle class income in Pennsylvania in 2025, according to an analysis by finance website GoBankingRates.
Here’s what’s considered a middle class and upper-middle class income in Pennsylvania in 2025, according to an analysis by finance website GoBankingRates. GETTY IMAGES

Pennsylvania residents need to make more money now to be considered in the “middle class” compared to 2022, according to a new report.

The U.S. Census Bureau reports Pennsylvania has a median household income of $76,081, though some of the commonwealth’s counties have much lower median incomes.

A March 17 report from finance website GoBankingRates found the minimum household income required to be considered middle class increased by $1,941 in Pennsylvania from 2022 to 2025.

The report defines “middle class” as an annual household income two-thirds to double the median income and outlined those incomes for all 50 states. Minimum middle class incomes ranged from $36,610 to $67,768, depending on the state.

U.S. residents have seen the cost for essentials increase across the board recently, with a 2.8% overall inflation rate from February 2024 to February 2025, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. One of the only items to see some price relief has been gas. Current and proposed tariffs by President Donald Trump’s administration are expected to increase consumer prices for some items, as well.

What’s considered middle class in Pennsylvania?

A Pennsylvania household needed to make $48,780 in 2022 to be considered middle class, but that number has increased to $50,721 as of 2025, according to GoBankingRates. In 2012, the state’s minimum middle class income was $34,845.

Mississippi has the lowest income needed to be considered middle class in the U.S., while Maryland has the highest.

GoBankingRates reports Pennsylvania household incomes from $50,721 to $152,162 are middle class, and the “upper-middle” class starts at $118,348.

A recent report from finance website SmartAsset named Cameron, Forest and Cambria counties among the poorest in Pennsylvania, with median incomes ranging from $46,186 to $54,221.

The commonwealth’s minimum wage is the same as the federal minimum, at $7.25, and has been for 16 years. A single adult without children needs to make more than three times this amount to afford basic necessities in State College, estimates from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology indicate. The tipped minimum cash wage in the commonwealth is $2.83 an hour.

A Pennsylvania resident would need to work 145 hours per week at minimum wage to afford a typically priced, two-bedroom rental home, the National Low Income Housing Coalition reports.

Centre County has a median household income of $72,748, according to the Census Bureau, and 17.1% of the county’s residents live in poverty.

Meredith Howard
Belleville News-Democrat
Meredith Howard is a service journalist with the Belleville News-Democrat. She is a Baylor University graduate and has previously freelanced with the Illinois Times and the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. Support my work with a digital subscription
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