Most Affordable Counties for Families: Top 50

Published May 1, 2026

Finding an affordable county is one thing. Finding one that is also safe, with good schools? That is the real challenge. We built a family affordability index that combines three of the most important factors for families: cost of living (40% weight), school quality (35% weight), and safety (25% weight). The result is a ranked list of the 50 best counties in America for families on a budget.

The top county is Nuckolls County, Nebraska, with a family affordability score of 93.2. These are places where your dollar stretches further, your children attend strong schools, and your neighborhood is safe — all at the same time.

The 50 Most Affordable Counties for Families (2026)

Our family affordability score combines cost of living (40%), school quality (35%), and safety (25%) into a single metric. All three component scores are 0-100 percentile ranks.

RankCountyStateFamily ScoreCost ScoreSchool ScoreSafety ScoreMedian Income
1Nuckolls CountyNE93.293.889.397.5$70,201
2Thomas CountyNE93.2899597.5$72,708
3Hardin CountyIL92.794.187.697.5$57,155
4Loup CountyNE90.578.299.597.5$60,156
5Gallatin CountyIL90.493.381.997.5$54,626
6Petroleum CountyMT89.17796.997.5$59,318
7Martin CountyKY88.599.273.991.7$46,185
8McCreary CountyKY87.996.974.692.3$37,355
9Wolfe CountyKY87.599.37487.4$29,052
10Hamilton CountyIL86.986.882.493.3$61,520
11Johnson CountyIL86.879.18897.5$65,203
12Cottle CountyTX86.899.26597.5$58,819
13Knott CountyKY86.789.181.390.3$37,736
14Cumberland CountyKY86.59772.389.6$39,662
15Leslie CountyKY86.598.469.391.6$40,176
16Pendleton CountyWV86.585.888.584.7$61,738
17Alexander CountyIL86.293.27097.5$43,523
18Stewart CountyGA85.895.566.397.5$35,000
19Woodson CountyKS85.790.688.374.4$48,152
20Monroe CountyWV85.788.682.785.3$54,508
21Rockcastle CountyKY85.693.375.387.6$48,367
22Garden CountyNE85.587.674.697.5$44,777
23Hall CountyTX85.495.482.573.5$46,728
24Jackson CountySD85.39268.897.5$26,686
25Wetzel CountyWV85.390.887.373.6$53,341
26Stanton CountyKS8587.373.397.5$70,361
27Norton CountyKS84.982.38490.4$50,305
28Collingsworth CountyTX84.988.874.992.7$60,165
29Mitchell CountyTX84.993.368.594.6$56,033
30Quitman CountyMS84.794.963.997.5$32,131
31Claiborne ParishLA84.697.378.872.5$31,784
32Brooks CountyTX84.698.767.386.2$31,310
33Webster CountyGA84.592.865.897.5$40,764
34Owsley CountyKY84.598.761.494.3$31,064
35Rock CountyNE84.58871.297.5$57,500
36Pleasants CountyWV84.586.277.591.5$61,038
37Johnson CountyKY84.485.280.688.5$43,014
38Dundy CountyNE84.289.273.890.9$56,563
39Elliott CountyKY84.192.472.287.4$40,074
40Franklin CountyNE84.192.37090.6$57,692
41Smith CountyKS8485.785.778.8$57,024
42Clinton CountyKY8493.967.391.4$42,168
43Gilmer CountyWV848682.483.1$50,991
44Letcher CountyKY83.894.365.393$40,501
45Billings CountyND83.871.894.188.7$81,250
46Kinney CountyTX83.880.580.793.5$66,341
47Clay CountyWV83.897.77869.8$42,790
48Monroe CountyKY83.787.27590.3$49,430
49Keweenaw CountyMI83.780.499.367.3$53,893
50Jewell CountyKS83.693.265.593.4$52,344

The Kentucky-Illinois-Nebraska Corridor

The geographic pattern is unmistakable: Kentucky (13 counties), Nebraska (7 counties), Texas (6 counties), West Virginia (6 counties), Illinois (5 counties) dominate the family affordability rankings. These states share a common trait: low housing costs combined with adequate school funding and low crime.

Kentucky leads with multiple counties in Appalachian coal country where housing costs are among the lowest in the nation. Counties like Martin County offer median home values well below $100,000 while maintaining solid graduation rates and per-pupil spending.

Illinois and Nebraska contribute counties from their rural heartland where the combination of Midwestern school funding models, low population density, and affordable housing creates ideal conditions for families.

The Income Question: Can You Earn a Living Here?

The average median household income across the top 50 counties is $50,184 — below the national median of approximately $75,000. This is the central tradeoff of affordable counties: they are affordable in part because wages are lower.

However, the cost-adjusted picture is different. A family earning $50,000 in a county where the median home costs $80,000 has far more purchasing power than a family earning $100,000 in a county where the median home costs $500,000. When housing consumes 15% of income rather than 40%, the effective standard of living can be higher despite the lower paycheck.

For remote workers earning coastal salaries while living in heartland counties, the math is even more favorable. Several counties on this list have seen population growth as remote work makes geographic arbitrage increasingly accessible.

What "Good Schools" Means in These Counties

School quality in the top 50 may surprise you. The school score incorporates graduation rates and per-pupil expenditure data from NCES. Many of these small, rural districts achieve strong outcomes with relatively modest spending:

  • Smaller class sizes: Rural districts often have student-to-teacher ratios that suburban districts can only dream of, sometimes as low as 8:1.
  • Community investment: In small counties, the school is often the heart of the community. Parents are deeply involved, and local pride drives accountability.
  • State funding equalization: States like Illinois, Kentucky, and Nebraska have school funding formulas that direct more state dollars to lower-income districts, evening the playing field.
  • High graduation rates: Several top-50 counties have graduation rates above 90%, despite lower overall spending levels.

Safety as a Family Priority

Every county in the top 50 has a safety score above 73, meaning they rank in at least the 73rd percentile nationally. Most score above 85. For families with children, this metric often outweighs all others — and these counties deliver.

The correlation between low population density and low crime holds consistently across the list. These are communities where leaving your front door unlocked is not unusual, and where children walk or bike to school without parental anxiety.

Methodology

The family affordability score is a weighted composite of three CountyScore dimensions: Cost of Living (40%), School Quality (35%), and Safety (25%). Each component uses percentile-rank scoring on a 0-100 scale. Cost data comes from the Census Bureau American Community Survey (2019-2023), school data from NCES and Census ACS, and crime data from FBI Uniform Crime Reports (2022). Median household income is included for context but is not part of the family affordability formula.

Data sources: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey (ACS) 5-Year Estimates (2019-2023), FBI Uniform Crime Reports (2022), CDC County Health Rankings (2024), FEMA National Risk Index, NCES school data, and EPA Safe Drinking Water Information System. All figures are estimates and may differ from other published analyses due to methodology differences.

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