KIDS COUNT

National 2026 KIDS COUNT® Data Book

The 2026 KIDS COUNT® Data Book shows that Michigan is ranked 34th  in the nation for overall child well-being.

Michigan continues to rank in the bottom 10 states in education at 42nd and in the bottom half of states in economic well-being at 32nd. The state’s highest score continues to be in health, ranking in the top half of states at 21st, due in part to Michigan having one of the lowest uninsured rates for child healthcare in the country. The comprehensive scores in the domains of health and family and community factors were both improvements from the previous year at 662 and 651respectively; however, Michigan still ranks in the bottom half of states in family and community factors at 27th.

Digging deeper into the educational data, a stark picture emerges: 56% of young children are not in school, a rate that has worsened since 2019 despite significant investments in universal pre-K in recent years. Additionally, 3 in 4 fourth grade students are not proficient in reading, with reading proficiency shown to be 10% worse than pre-pandemic levels, and 3 in 4 eighth grade students are not proficient in math, with math proficiency also 10% worse than pre-pandemic levels. And 17% of Michigan high school students did not graduate on time in 2024. This is an improvement over 2019, but remains lower than the national average.