In Kids Count, Kids Count Michigan, Kids Count Press Releases, News Releases

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 16, 2025

Contact:
Laura Millard Ross
lauramr@mlpp.org
(517) 281-1084

2025 Kids Count in Michigan Data Book & Profiles provide latest insights into the well-being of Michigan’s kids

Michigan saw improvement in 11 of 19 key areas, most notably in health, while educational data and trends continued to worsen

LANSING—At a time when basic needs like health care and food are being stripped away from families and children across our state and country, today’s release of the 2025 Kids Count in Michigan Data Book & Profiles is more important than ever. These resources provide the latest evidence and insights into child well-being, which state policymakers and other state leaders can use in addressing the most pressing needs of Michigan’s youngest residents.

The Data Book & Profiles include statewide and county data and trends in four categories: economic security, education, health and safety, and family and community. Additionally, data is compiled for three cities with some of the highest child populations in the state: Detroit, Flint and Grand Rapids. 

This year’s findings include an analysis of trends from 2018 to the most recent year that data is available, typically 2023 or 2024. The statewide data profile shows that Michigan saw improvement in 11 of 19 key areas, most notably in health, pointing to the importance of continuing to support families in our state, especially the more than half a million Michiganders who could lose their health insurance due to the harmful federal Republican megabill that was signed into law this past July. 

“Child health is an area that has been prioritized in the past, and we have seen positive outcomes as a result, including a decline in teen births, more kids with health coverage, a decline in infant mortality and increased lead testing for toddlers,” said Michigan League for Public Policy President & CEO Monique Stanton. “These are all big wins for Michigan kids, but harmful legislation like the federal megabill will undoubtedly set us back, which is why it’s so important that local lawmakers protect Medicaid and other essential health services in the state budget.”

The Data Book & Profiles also show areas where things have clearly worsened for Michigan kids and families. Public funding for education has not kept up with inflation, which is an area where some of the worst outcomes are seen. The share of students reading proficiently in third grade declined by 9.7% statewide, worsening in 62 counties and showing no improvement in 10 counties from 2018 to 2024. And the share of students proficient in eighth-grade math declined by 18.6% statewide, worsening in 77 counties and showing no improvement in 3 counties from 2019 to 2024. 

The average cost of monthly child care also saw one of the worst changes, with all counties in Michigan seeing child care costs either worsen or remain elevated. Costs increased in 77 of Michigan’s 83 counties. The statewide average cost of monthly child care increased by $261.   

And while Michigan’s child poverty rate for children ages 0-17 declined by 9% and fell in 70 out of 83 counties, 17.5% of all Michigan kids were still living in poverty in 2023 and food insecurity increased by 21.8%. This indicates that many families in Michigan are still struggling to make ends meet on a daily basis, which will only be exacerbated by recent federal cuts to social safety net programs.

“This is a fragile time for Michigan kids and families, especially those with moderate to low incomes. In addition to the harmful cuts to Medicaid, cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program are also deeply concerning as food insecurity is on the rise in 61 counties across our state,” said Stanton. “Politics should not be getting in the way of providing nutritious food to children during the most important years of their lives. Stripping food away from them is unconscionable as it will undoubtedly result in worse health outcomes, developmental delays and academic challenges that will put their chances of having a bright future at risk.”

This year’s Data Book focuses on what Michigan’s kids will inherit, highlighting the need for family economic security, a world-class education, health care, and thriving families and communities. It also provides an evidence-based, pro-kid agenda featuring 12 key policy proposals to lift up families as they work to provide opportunities for their children and support young people as they strive to make the transition into adulthood. The policy proposals in the Data Book’s pro-kid agenda include: 

  • Fully funding the true cost of early childhood care and education, including stronger workforce investments and ensured access and affordability for all families
  • Providing continuous Medicaid coverage for young children 
  • Increasing access to mental health services in public schools
  • Fully funding the Opportunity Index for Michigan schools and students
  • Reducing teen smoking by increasing state spending on tobacco prevention and cessation 
  • Expanding the Earned Income Tax Credit to young adults under age 25
  • Adopting universal free community college
  • Ending life without parole for emerging adults
  • Adopting a Michigan Child Tax Credit that includes kids who are left out of the federal credit because their parents earn too little
  • Enacting paid family and medical leave
  • Increasing access to the Family Independence Program, which reached an all-time low in 2023 due to policy barriers and a low payment standard
  • Investing in affordable rental housing

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The Michigan League for Public Policy, www.mlpp.org, is a nonprofit policy institute focused on opportunity for all. Its mission is to use data to educate, advocate and fight for policy solutions that undo historic and systemic racial and economic inequities to lift up Michiganders who have been left out of prosperity. It is the only state-level organization that addresses poverty in a comprehensive way. The League is also the State of Michigan’s Kids Count organization.

The Kids Count in Michigan project, https://mlpp.org/kids-count/, is part of a broad national effort to improve conditions for children and their families. Long-standing, major funders for the project include the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan Foundation, the Children’s Foundation, the Max M. and Marjorie S. Fisher Foundation, the Ruth Mott Foundation, The Skillman Foundation, United Way for Southeastern Michigan and many other generous sponsors. Additional state and local data is available at www.datacenter.kidscount.org.