Suburban poverty traps America's senior citizens
· Axios

More older Americans are falling into poverty in suburbs built for middle-class stability.
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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 counties already show tens of thousands of older adults in poverty.
- A New York county-level report found older-adult poverty surged 78% in Nassau County and 48% in Suffolk County from 2012 to 2022 — two suburban Long Island counties, per the New York Post.
- Nearly 1 in 3 older households is cost burdened, meaning they spend over 30% of their income on housing.
The bottom line: "I worry a lot about people who are stuck in place rather than aging in place by choice," Jennifer Molinsky of Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies tells Axios.
- Molinsky said many older adults in suburbs aren't moving there — they've lived there for decades and now can't find smaller, more accessible, or transit-connected housing options nearby.