Seattle, WA β€” City Data, Demographics & Statistics

King County Β· Washington

🧬

City DNA

A unique fingerprint for Seattle based on 8 key metrics β€” compared to averages.

PopulationIncomeHome ValueSafetyEducationMedian AgeClimateCost of Living
Seattle
National Avg
Washington Avg
Population: 85Income: 81Home Value: 91Safety: 100Education: 73Median Age: 59Climate: 45Cost of Living: 100
πŸ†
#18 in America51.9/100 Livability Score

Why Seattle, WA Is One of the Best Places to Live in America

Seattle, WA ranks 18th overall among all US cities with a livability score of 51.9/100, placing it among the best places to live in America. Residents enjoy 166 sunny days per year, well above the national average. A cost of living index of 208.3 makes Seattle more affordable than 94% of cities nationwide. With a median home value of $912,100, the housing market remains accessible compared to many US cities. See full ranking

Safety
63
Affordability
94
Education
0
Income
6
Employment
0
Weather
97
Commute
11
Housing
91

Quick Stats

Population

741,440

2023 ACS

Median Income

$121,984

2023

Median Home Value

$912,100

2023

Median Rent

$1,998

2023

Median Age

35.5

Unemployment

4.2%

Avg Temperature

51Β°F

Cost of Living Index

208.3

100 = national avg

Seattle is a city in King County, Washington, with a population of 741,440 according to the 2023 American Community Survey. Seattle is one of the communities in Washington.

The median household income in Seattle is $121,984, and the median home value is $912,100. The cost of living index is 208.3 (where 100 = national average), and the median rent is $1,998 per month. The unemployment rate is 4.2%, and the median age is 35.5 years.

People & Demographics

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)

Population

Total Population

741,440

Male

378,278

51.0%

Female

363,162

49.0%

Median Age

35.5

Education & Household

Bachelor's or Higher

51.2%

High School or Higher

58.5%

Foreign Born

19.9%

Veterans

3.0%

Married

36.5%

Avg Household Size

2.0

Marital Status by Age

Race & Ethnicity

Diversity Index

0.565

Simpson's Index (0-1)

Largest Group

White

61.8%

Foreign Born

19.9%

White
61.8%
Black
6.6%
Asian
17.2%
Native American
0.6%
Pacific Islander
0.3%
Two or More
10.5%
Other
3.0%

Hispanic/Latino Ethnicity

Hispanic/Latino is an ethnicity, not a race. People of any race can identify as Hispanic. This percentage overlaps with the racial categories above.

Hispanic/Latino

8.2%

60,724 people

Not Hispanic/Latino

91.8%

Hispanic/Latino Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Mexican
35,380 (58.3%)
Puerto Rican
3,037 (5.0%)
Cuban
1,775 (2.9%)
Dominican
527 (0.9%)
Salvadoran
1,642 (2.7%)
Guatemalan
1,329 (2.2%)
Colombian
1,921 (3.2%)
Honduran
793 (1.3%)
Ecuadorian
800 (1.3%)
Peruvian
1,507 (2.5%)
Other Hispanic
12,029 (19.8%)

Asian Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Asian Indian
21,946 (17.2%)
Chinese
43,138 (33.9%)
Filipino
14,210 (11.2%)
Vietnamese
12,795 (10.1%)
Korean
9,486 (7.5%)
Japanese
7,544 (5.9%)
Pakistani
1,227 (1.0%)
Cambodian
1,480 (1.2%)
Hmong
477 (0.4%)
Thai
945 (0.7%)
Laotian
990 (0.8%)
Taiwanese
3,428 (2.7%)
Other Asian
9,614 (7.6%)

Native Hawaiian & Pacific Islander Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Native Hawaiian
247 (12.8%)
Samoan
588 (30.5%)
Chamorro
371 (19.2%)
Fijian
141 (7.3%)
Marshallese
20 (1.0%)
Other Pacific Islander
528 (27.4%)

American Indian & Alaska Native Detail

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
Cherokee
13 (0.3%)
Navajo
207 (4.9%)
Choctaw
4 (0.1%)
Chippewa
3 (0.1%)
Other Native American
4,027 (95.3%)

Languages Spoken

Total Speakers (5+)

710,044

English Only

77.0%

#1 Non-English Language

Chinese

35,219 speakers

Limited English

7.1%

Language Distribution

Chinese
35,219 (5.0%)
Spanish
32,774 (4.6%)
Other Indo-European
22,260 (3.1%)
Other Asian
15,702 (2.2%)
Other Languages
15,333 (2.2%)
Vietnamese
10,439 (1.5%)
Tagalog
7,803 (1.1%)
Slavic Languages
6,382 (0.9%)
Korean
5,748 (0.8%)
French/Haitian/Cajun
5,288 (0.7%)

English Proficiency

Speaks English Very Well

92.9%

Limited English Proficiency

7.1%

Chinese
42.1% limited English
Spanish
28.3% limited English
Other Indo-European
11.7% limited English
Other Asian
27.0% limited English
Other Languages
41.6% limited English
Vietnamese
56.9% limited English
Tagalog
32.5% limited English
Slavic Languages
22.3% limited English
Korean
33.1% limited English
French/Haitian/Cajun
10.3% limited English

Veterans & Military

Total Veterans

22,148

3.0% of population

Disability Rate

19.3%

4,268 with disability

Veteran Median Income

$65,019

Unemployment Rate

4.4%

Period of Service

Gulf War (2001+)
28.1%
Gulf War (1990-2001)
22.3%
Vietnam
31.5%
Korea
5.4%
World War II
1.8%

Veteran Age Distribution

18-34
11.1%
35-54
28.4%
55-64
13.8%
65-74
20.4%
75+
26.4%

Male Veterans

19,827

89.5%

Female Veterans

2,321

10.5%

Veteran vs Non-Veteran Income

Veteran Income

$65,019

Non-Veteran Income

$69,197

Difference

-$4,178

-6.0% lower

Disability Status

With Disability

4,268

Without Disability

17,880

Disability Rate

19.3%

Ancestry & Heritage

Total Reporting Ancestry

564,376

#1 Ancestry

German

14.0% (103,544)

#2 Ancestry

English

12.2% (90,656)

#3 Ancestry

Irish

10.8% (79,914)

Top 20 Ancestries

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)
German
14.0%
English
12.2%
Irish
10.8%
Italian
4.7%
European
3.9%
Norwegian
3.7%
Swedish
3.0%
French
2.8%
Sub-Saharan African
2.7%
Scottish
2.7%
Polish
2.6%
American
2.4%
Russian
1.4%
Dutch
1.2%
Scotch-Irish
1.2%
British
1.2%
Welsh
0.9%
Danish
0.9%
Arab
0.7%
Ukrainian
0.7%

Families & Households

Total Households

353,019

Family Households

150,981

42.8%

Married Couples

122,178

34.6%

Non-Family Households

202,038

57.2%

Single Mother Households

19,593

5.6%

Single Father Households

9,210

2.6%

Living Alone

145,768

41.3%

Children Under 18

Total Children

97,880

In Married Couple

76,657

78.3%

With Single Mother

15,917

16.3%

With Single Father

5,306

5.4%

Family Income

Median Family Income

$181,777

Married Couple Income

$208,630

Single Mother Income

$76,877

Single Father Income

$93,702

Avg Family Size

2.0

Avg Non-Family Size

1.7

Grandparents w/ Grandchildren

6,053

Grandparents Responsible

1,060

Economy

Source: U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023)

Income Overview

Median Household Income

$121,984

+67% vs national

Per Capita Income

$82,508

+122% vs national

Poverty Rate

9.9%

-27% vs national

Gini Index

0.4878

0 = perfect equality

Unemployment

4.2%

-19% vs national

SNAP Recipients

7.5%

of households

How Seattle Compares

Seattle vs Similar Cities

Compared to cities with 500,000 - 1,000,000 residents. Seattle is highlighted.

Median Household Income

Per Capita Income

Poverty Rate

Unemployment Rate

πŸ“Š

Where Do You Stack Up?

Enter your household income to see how you compare to other households in Seattle. The median household income here is $121,984.

$

Income Distribution

<$25K
11.2%
$25-50K
10.5%
$50-75K
11.4%
$75-100K
9.5%
$100-150K
16.3%
$150-200K
11.9%
$200K+
29.2%

Employment Snapshot

Unemployment Rate

4.2%

-20% vs WA avg

Labor Force

480,209

Employed

458,840

Mean Commute

18 min

How People Get to Work

Employment by Sector

Education & Workforce

Bachelor's Degree+

51.2%

of adults 25+

High School Diploma+

58.5%

of adults 25+

Median Age

35.5

Work from Home

31.3%

of workers

Cost of Living

Overall Index

208.3

100 = national avg

+108.3 vs national average

Living Wage (1 Adult)

$91,644

per year

Living Wage (Family of 4)

$216,614

per year

Cost Index by Category

Housing
314.0
Food
143.2
Transportation
124.0
Healthcare
134.6
Utilities
168.7

100 = national average. Higher = more expensive.

Fair Market Rent

Source: HUD

1 Bedroom

$2,146

per month

2 Bedroom

$2,501

per month

The median household income in Seattle, WA is $121,984, which is 66.6% above the national average of $73,224. Per capita income is $82,508. The poverty rate of 9.9% is lower than the WA state average of 10.4%. The Gini index of income inequality is 0.4878, where 0 represents perfect equality and 1 represents maximum inequality. The unemployment rate is 4.2%, compared to the state average of 5.3%. The labor force is 480,209. 51.2% of adults hold a bachelor's degree or higher. The average commute time is 18 minutes, with 31.3% working from home. About 37.6% of workers drive alone to work. The overall cost of living index is 208.3, which is 108.3% above the national average. Housing costs are above the national average at an index of 314.0. A single adult needs to earn approximately $91,644 per year to cover basic expenses.

Housing & Real Estate

Market SnapshotRedfin β€” January 2026

Median Sale Price

$790,000

Median List Price

$819,000

Price Per Sq Ft

$537

Days on Market

61

Active Inventory

1,369

Months of Supply

3.5

Seller's market

Zillow Home Value

$837,193

ZHVI β€” January 2026

Zillow Rent Index

$2,174

ZORI β€” January 2026

Market CompetitivenessRedfin

Sold Above List

11.6%

Off Market in 2 Weeks

49.0%

Sale-to-List Ratio

98.5%

Buyer's market

Sold Above Asking
11.6%
Under Contract in 2 Wks
49.0%
Listings with Price Drops
21.2%

Price TrendsRedfin

Sale Price ↓ 7.0%List Price ↓ 3.6%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

Market ActivityRedfin

Homes Sold

396

New Listings

876

Pending Sales

533

Homes Sold ↓ 47.6%New Listings ↓ 14.3%Pending ↓ 36.2%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

Price Per Square FootRedfin

Median Sale $/SF

$537

Median List $/SF

$575

Sale $/SF ↓ 10.5%List $/SF ↓ 1.7%Mar 24 β†’ Jan 26

Seattle vs Similar CitiesCensus ACS / Redfin

Compared to cities with 500,000 - 1,000,000 residents. Seattle is highlighted.

Median Home Value

Median Rent

Median Price Per Sq Ft

Rent Burden

Census Housing DataU.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023

Median Home Value

$912,100

Median Rent

$1,998

Total Housing Units

382,933

Vacancy Rate

7.8%

Owner Occupied

44.3%

Renter Occupied

55.8%

Median Property Tax

$7,025

per year

Monthly Cost (w/ Mortgage)

$2,786

Housing Types

Single Family
43.8%
Multi-Family
56.0%
Mobile Home
0.3%

Property TaxU.S. Census Bureau ACS 2023

Median Property Tax

$7,025

per year

Effective Tax Rate

0.77%

of home value

Median Home Value

$912,100

Estimated Mean Tax

$7,856

The effective property tax rate is calculated by dividing the median annual property tax ($7,025) by the median home value ($912,100). In Seattle, WA, this works out to an effective rate of 0.77%. This is below the national average of approximately 1.1%.

The current median sale price in Seattle, WA is $790,000 according to Redfin data. Homes spend a median of 61 days on the market. 11.6% of homes sold above asking price. The market has 3.5 months of supply. The median price per square foot is $537. Zillow's observed rent index is $2,174/month. About 44.3% of housing units are owner-occupied. The median year homes were built is 1974. There are 382,933 total housing units. Homeowners pay a median annual property tax of $7,025. The effective tax rate is 0.77%, below the national average.

Crime Overview

Source: FBI Crime Data Explorer (2024)

Violent Crime Rate

7.75

per 1,000 residents

+198% vs national

Property Crime Rate

50.08

per 1,000 residents

+191% vs national

Total Crimes

43,955

2024

Violent Clearance

32%

cases solved

Property Clearance

4%

cases solved

YoY Change

-0.3%

violent crime rate

improving vs 2023

How Seattle Compares

Source: FBI (2024)

Seattle vs Similar Cities

Source: FBI (2024)

Compared to cities with 500,000 - 1,000,000 residents. Seattle is highlighted in green.

Violent Crime Rate (per 1,000)

Property Crime Rate (per 1,000)

Murder Rate (per 1,000)

Crime Rate Trends

Source: FBI
Violent ↑ 29.6%Property ↓ 9.3%2015 β†’ 2024

Crime Composition

Source: FBI (2024)

Violent Crime Breakdown

Property Crime Breakdown

Crime Clearance (Solve) Rates

Source: FBI (2024)

Seattle police solve 54% of murder cases but only 1% of motor vehicle theft cases.

Weapon Used in Violent Crime

Source: FBI (2024)

Crime Breakdown

Source: FBI Crime Data Explorer (2024)
Crime TypeCategoryCountRate per 1KClearance %
MurderViolent520.0753.8%
RapeViolent3520.4614.5%
RobberyViolent1,6772.2119.2%
Aggravated AssaultViolent3,8105.0138.8%
BurglaryProperty8,75611.527.0%
Larceny/TheftProperty21,90528.823.3%
Motor Vehicle TheftProperty7,4009.741.1%

Seattle, WA reported 5,894 violent crimes and 38,061 property crimes in 2024. The violent crime rate of 7.75 per 1,000 residents is 198.3% above the national average of 2.60 per 1,000. Law enforcement cleared 32% of violent crimes. Larceny/theft accounts for 21,905 of the property crime reports. Firearms were involved in 23.0% of aggravated assaults. Violent crime has been trending downward.

Crime History

Source: FBI
YearViolentPropertyViolent RateProperty Rate
20245,89438,0617.7550.08
20235,86337,7817.7850.12
20226,13641,8398.4157.34
20215,92940,4217.5351.31
20204,89537,7906.3448.98
20194,47134,3335.8544.96
20185,02738,2466.7751.49
20174,47037,5136.2052.00
20164,30138,4426.1454.89
20154,09037,7455.9855.21

School Shootings

Source: The Washington Post

Total Incidents

2

Total Killed

2

Total Injured

0

DateSchoolKilledInjuredTypeWeapon
Jun 7, 2024Garfield High School10targetednan
Nov 8, 2022Ingraham High School10targetedhandgun

Data from The Washington Post, licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.

Natural Hazard Risk

Source: FEMA National Risk Index

Risk Score

99.7

Very High

Expected Annual Loss

99.7

Score (0-100)

Social Vulnerability

14.8

Score (0-100)

Community Resilience

87.4

Score (0-100)

Scores range from 0 (lowest risk) to 100 (highest risk) relative to all U.S. communities. Data from FEMA National Risk Index.

Disaster History & Federal Spending

Source: FEMA

Total Declarations

34

Public Assistance

$817.0M

Individual Assistance

$4.1M

Most Common Type

Flood

16 declarations

Public Assistance by Category

Total: $981.2M
DisasterTypeDatePA $IA $
Severe Storms, Straight-line Winds, Floo… β†’FloodDec 2025β€”β€”
Severe Winter Storms, Straight-line Wind… β†’Severe StormApr 2024$817Kβ€”
Bolt Creek Fire β†’FireSep 2022β€”β€”
Severe Storms, Straight-line Winds, Floo… β†’Mud/LandslideJan 2022$16.4Mβ€”
Severe Winter Storm, Straight-line Winds… β†’Winter StormApr 2021$253Kβ€”
Severe Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and… β†’FloodApr 2020$8.8Mβ€”
Covid-19 Pandemic β†’BiologicalMar 2020$702.6M$2.6M
Covid-19 β†’BiologicalMar 2020β€”β€”
Severe Winter Storms, Flooding, Landslid… β†’FloodApr 2017$5.8Mβ€”
Wildfires and Mudslides β†’FireOct 2015$1.7Mβ€”
Flooding and Mudslides β†’Mud/LandslideApr 2014$26Kβ€”
Severe Winter Storm, Flooding, Landslide… β†’Severe StormMar 2012$8.4Mβ€”
Severe Winter Storm, Flooding, Landslide… β†’Severe StormMar 2011$5.1Mβ€”
Severe Winter Storm and Record and Near … β†’Severe StormMar 2009$5.7Mβ€”
Severe Winter Storm, Landslides, Mudslid… β†’FloodJan 2009$11.0M$43K
Severe Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and… β†’Severe StormDec 2007$4.0M$1.2M
Severe Winter Storm, Landslides, and Mud… β†’Severe StormFeb 2007$12.1Mβ€”
Severe Storms, Flooding, Landslides, and… β†’Severe StormDec 2006$4.1M$207K
Hurricane Katrina Evacuation β†’Coastal StormSep 2005β€”β€”
Severe Storms and Flooding β†’Severe StormNov 2003$688K$74K

Showing 20 of 39 disasters

PA = FEMA Public Assistance (infrastructure recovery). IA = Individual Assistance (homeowner/renter aid).

Flood Insurance (NFIP)

Source: FEMA NFIP

Total Claims

3,366

Total Claims Paid

$62,563,000

Avg Claim Payout

$18,587

County-level NFIP data from FEMA National Flood Insurance Program.

Hazard Mitigation

Source: FEMA Hazard Mitigation Assistance

Mitigation Projects

120

Federal Funding

$55,125,859

Properties Protected

472

Avg Benefit-Cost Ratio

2.98

BCR

Top Mitigation Project Types

Project TypeProjectsFederal $
205.6: Structural Retrofitting/Rehabilitating Public Structures - Seismic19$9,002,250
202.1: Elevation of Private Structures - Riverine17$8,436,476
200.1: Acquisition of Private Real Property (Structures and Land) - Riverine16$8,361,399
91.1: Local Multihazard Mitigation Plan13$1,086,823
205.4: Non Structural Retrofitting/Rehabilitating Public Structures - Seismic5$1,558,304

Federally funded projects to reduce future disaster risk. Only includes completed or obligated projects.

Seattle has a very high overall natural hazard risk rating according to FEMA's National Risk Index. The top hazard risks are earthquake, avalanche, landslide. The area has had 34 federal disaster declarations. The most common disaster type is flood (16 declarations). 3,366 flood insurance claims have been filed in the area. FEMA has obligated $817,049,232 in public assistance recovery funding. $4,100,219 has been distributed in individual assistance to disaster-affected residents. 120 hazard mitigation projects have been funded to reduce future risk.

Health

Community Health

Source: CDC PLACES

Obesity Rate

22.2%

13.9pp below the national average

Depression Rate

25.1%

1.6pp above the national average

Diabetes Rate

6.1%

5.8pp below the national average

Uninsured Rate

6.1%

4.5pp below the national average

Health Scorecard

Higher scores indicate better health outcomes relative to the national average (50 = average)

Health Outcomes

Age-adjusted prevalence rates. Green bars indicate rates below the national average; red indicates above.

High Cholesterol

30.9%

Arthritis

17.0%

Cancer (excl. skin)

6.0%

Teeth Lost (65+)

6.1%

Health Risk Behaviors

Prevention & Screening

Green bars indicate rates above the national average (more preventive care); red indicates below.

Mental Health & Wellbeing

Frequent Mental Distress

15.3%

14+ days in past month

Depression

25.1%

Loneliness

β€”

Lack of Support

β€”

Disability Prevalence

Any Disability

19.6%

Mobility

6.1%

Cognitive

11.2%

Hearing

4.0%

Vision

3.0%

Self-Care

2.1%

Independent Living

5.0%

Seattle has an obesity rate of 22.2%, which is 13.9pp below the national average. The depression rate is 25.1%, 1.6pp above the national average. About 6.1% of adults lack health insurance. 68.3% of residents had an annual checkup in the past year.

Nearby Hospitals

Source: CMS Hospital Compare

Nearest Hospitals

5

With Emergency Services

5

Avg CMS Rating

3.5 / 5

Nearest Hospital

In city

Virginia Mason Medical Center

Loading map…
HospitalDistanceTypeRatingER
Virginia Mason Medical CenterIn cityAcute Care Hospitals5/5Yes
Harborview Medical CenterIn cityAcute Care Hospitals1/5Yes
Swedish Medical Center / Cherry Hill1.7 miAcute Care Hospitals4/5Yes
Swedish Medical Center1.7 miAcute Care Hospitals4/5Yes
Kaiser Permanente Central Hospital3.0 miAcute Care Hospitalsβ€”Yes

Climate & Environment

Annual Overview

Avg Temperature

51Β°F

Sunny Days

166

per year

Annual Rainfall

49.9"

UV Index

3.5

annual avg

Annual Snowfall

3.2"

🌀️

Weather Time Machine

Experience a year of weather in Seattle. Click a month or press play.

0Β°20Β°40Β°60Β°80Β°100Β°

40Β°F

35Β° / 45Β°

Jan

πŸ’§ 6.5"❄️ 0.9"β˜€οΈ 9dπŸ’¨ 85%
🌑️Temperature
59Β° / 45Β°F
🌧️Precipitation
49.9" per year
β˜€οΈDays Breakdown
166 sunny days/yr
πŸ’¨Wind
πŸ’§Humidity
78% avg

Temperature Records

Source: NOAA

Record High

100Β°F

Record Low

6Β°F

Avg High

59Β°F

Avg Low

45Β°F

Monthly Averages

Source: NOAA Climate Normals
MonthHighLowRainSnowHumidityWind
Jan45Β°F35Β°F6.54"0.9"85%6.7 mph
Feb48Β°F35Β°F4.42"0.7"82%6.3 mph
Mar51Β°F37Β°F5.27"0.2"80%6.4 mph
Apr56Β°F41Β°F4.34"β€”78%5.9 mph
May63Β°F47Β°F2.98"β€”75%5.2 mph
Jun68Β°F52Β°F2.32"β€”72%5.1 mph
Jul75Β°F57Β°F0.99"β€”68%4.7 mph
Aug75Β°F57Β°F1.33"β€”69%4.6 mph
Sep69Β°F53Β°F2.54"β€”76%5.0 mph
Oct58Β°F46Β°F5.09"β€”82%5.8 mph
Nov49Β°F39Β°F7.50"0.4"85%6.9 mph
Dec44Β°F35Β°F6.58"1.0"84%6.8 mph

Seattle has an average annual temperature of 51Β°F. The area enjoys approximately 166 sunny days per year. Annual rainfall totals about 49.9 inches. Snowfall averages 3.2 inches per year.

Water Systems

Source: EPA SDWIS

Water Systems

15

Pop. Served

1,161,399

Violations (5yr)

0

No violations

System NamePop. ServedViolations (5yr)
SEATTLE PUBLIC UTILITIES1,091,9040
KING COUNTY WATER DISTRICT #2038,9740
KING COUNTY WATER DISTRICT #12517,5460
SKYWAY WATER & SEWER12,0360
Ravenwing Ranch2500
CHERRYWOOD MOBILE HOME MANOR1200
VALLEY MOBILE HOME PARK1200
COUNTRY HOMES MOBILE PARK900
HIDDEN VILLAGE MHP, LLC660
GOLF MHP600
MONTIPARK LLC600
HOT SPRINGS COURT550
BRUNSWICK HILLS MHP500
RIVER VILLAGE MHP400
Majestic Oaks Water System280

Greenhouse Gas Emitters

Source: EPA GHGRP (2023)

Facilities Reporting

7

Total COβ‚‚e

700.5K MT

Top Emitter

ASH GROVE CEMENT COMPANY-SEATTLE

367.7K MT COβ‚‚e

Total COβ‚‚e vs Similar Cities (500,000 - 1,000,000)

FacilitySectorCOβ‚‚e (MT)
ASH GROVE CEMENT COMPANY-SEATTLE
Ash Grove Cement Co
Minerals367,651
NUCOR STEEL SEATTLE INC
Nucor Corp
Metals82,396
University of Washington Seattle Campus
The University Of Washington Board Of Regents
Other80,936
CenTrio
Centrio Energy Seattle Llc
Power Plants68,651
CERTAINTEED GYPSUM SEATTLE
Saint-Gobain Corp
Minerals55,645
Ardagh Glass Inc. (Seattle)
Ardagh Glass Inc
Minerals44,364
Seattle City Light
City Of Seattle (Seattle City Light Department)
Other862

Data from EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP). Includes facilities emitting 25,000+ metric tons COβ‚‚e/year.

There are 15 water systems serving the area. 7 industrial facilities report greenhouse gas emissions totaling 700.5K metric tons of COβ‚‚e.

Infrastructure

Commute Overview2023 ACS

Mean Commute

18 min

-22% vs national

Drive Alone

37.6%

-52% vs national

Public Transit

13.9%

+1442% vs national

Work From Home

31.3%

+236% vs national

Carpool

5.1%

Walk / Bike

10.8%

combined

How Seattle's Commute ComparesCensus ACS 2023

How People Get to WorkCensus ACS 2023

Commute Mode BreakdownCensus ACS 2023

Traffic Fatalities

Source: NHTSA FARS (2023)

Fatalities

35

2023

6-Year Avg

32

fatalities/yr

Pedestrian

13

Cyclist

1

Nighttime

20

dark conditions

YearCrashesFatalitiesAlcoholPedestrianCyclist
202333350131
202240400203
202144440223
2020262810141
201927283142
20181919581

Data from NHTSA Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS). Includes only crashes involving at least one fatality.

The average commute in Seattle, WA is 18 minutes, which is 21.8% below the national average of 23 minutes. 37.6% of workers drive alone, compared to the national average of 78.7%. 31.3% work from home, which is above the WA state average of 12.7%. Public transit is used by 13.9% of commuters, compared to the national average of 0.9%. 5.1% of workers carpool. 8.3% walk to work. 2.5% commute by bicycle. In 2023, there were 35 traffic fatalities from 33 fatal crashes. 13 were pedestrians.

Internet & Broadband Access

Source: Census ACS

Broadband Access

94.2%

of households

Cable / Fiber / DSL

85.6%

of households

No Internet

3.4%

of households

Total Households

353,019

Internet Subscription Types

Cable, Fiber, or DSL
85.6%
Cellular Data Plan
89.6%
Satellite
3.1%
Cellular Only (no wired)
6.9%
No Internet Access
3.4%

Device Ownership

Source: Census ACS

Has Computer

97.9%

of households

Smartphone

95.0%

of households

Desktop / Laptop

90.6%

of households

Tablet

68.8%

of households

Any Computing Device
97.9%
Smartphone
95.0%
Desktop / Laptop
90.6%
Tablet
68.8%
Smartphone Only
4.4%
No Computer
2.1%

Percentage of households with each device type. Data from the U.S. Census Bureau ACS (2023 5-year estimates, tables B28001 & B28002).

Electricity Rates

Source: U.S. Energy Information Administration (2024)

Residential Rate

11.9Β’

per kWh

-31% vs 500,000 - 1,000,000 avg

Commercial Rate

10.0Β’

per kWh

-26% vs 500,000 - 1,000,000 avg

Industrial Rate

6.6Β’

per kWh

-32% vs 500,000 - 1,000,000 avg

Avg Monthly Bill

$114

residential

-17% vs 500,000 - 1,000,000 avg

30% below the national average of 17.1Β’/kWh

Residential electricity in Washington averages 11.9Β’ per kWh, compared to the national average of 17.1Β’. The average monthly electric bill is $114. State-level averages from EIA Electric Sales & Revenue data (2024).

Seattle vs Similar Cities

Source: EIA (2024)

Comparing electricity rates with randomly selected cities of similar population (500,000 - 1,000,000). Each city represents its state's average rate.

Residential Rate (Β’/kWh)

Commercial Rate (Β’/kWh)

Industrial Rate (Β’/kWh)

Average Monthly Bill

Water Systems

Source: EPA SDWIS

Water Systems

15

Population Served

1,161,399

Violations (5yr)

0

System NameTypeSourcePop. ServedViolations
SEATTLE PUBLIC UTILITIESCommunitySurface water1,091,9040
KING COUNTY WATER DISTRICT #20CommunityPurchased surface water38,9740
KING COUNTY WATER DISTRICT #125CommunityPurchased surface water17,5460
SKYWAY WATER & SEWERCommunityPurchased surface water12,0360
Ravenwing RanchCommunityGround water2500
CHERRYWOOD MOBILE HOME MANORCommunityGround water1200
VALLEY MOBILE HOME PARKCommunityGround water1200
COUNTRY HOMES MOBILE PARKCommunityGround water900
HIDDEN VILLAGE MHP, LLCCommunityGround water660
GOLF MHPCommunityGround water600
MONTIPARK LLCCommunityGround water600
HOT SPRINGS COURTCommunityGround water550
BRUNSWICK HILLS MHPCommunityGround water500
RIVER VILLAGE MHPCommunityGround water400
Majestic Oaks Water SystemCommunityGround water280

94.2% of households in Seattle have broadband internet access. 85.6% have cable, fiber, or DSL service. 6.9% rely solely on cellular data without a wired connection. 3.4% of households have no internet access. The area is served by 15 water systems, providing water to 1,161,399 people. No water quality violations have been reported in the past 5 years.

Politics & Government

County-level data: Election results are reported at the county level. Seattle is located in King County, WA. Results reflect all voters in the county, not just those in Seattle.

Election Overview

Source: King County (2024)

2024 Winner

Democrat

Dem Votes

832,606

74.2%

GOP Votes

252,193

22.5%

Total Votes

1,122,881

Margin

D+51.7%

Shift from 2020

R+1.0pp

vs prior election

πŸ“ŠElection Results by Year
2016–2024
πŸ“ˆPartisan Lean Trend
D+51.7%

Election History

Source: County-Level Election Results
YearDem VotesGOP VotesTotalDem %GOP %Margin
2024832,606252,1931,122,88174.2%22.5%D+51.7
2020907,310269,1671,210,50775.0%22.2%D+52.7
2016657,149197,781910,82372.2%21.7%D+50.4

In the 2024 presidential election, King County recorded 1,122,881 total votes. Democrats won the county with 74.2% of the vote compared to 22.5% for Republicans, a margin of D+51.7%. Compared to 2020, the margin shifted R+1.0pp from the previous election. Since 2016, King County has shifted 1.2 percentage points toward Democrats.

Official City Website

Source: seattle.gov

Public Records Request

Source: seattle.gov

Submit a public records request to Seattle β€” Uses Public Records Request Center portal.

Source: seattle.gov

Nonprofits Overview

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF

Total Nonprofits

5,109

Total Assets

$132.1B

Total Income

$45.5B

Per 10K Residents

68.9

nonprofits

-11.5% vs peers avg

Orgs with >$1M Assets

1,022

Median Assets

$488K

Oldest Active

1903

ruling year

Newest Org

2026

ruling year

Nonprofits by Category

Source: IRS / NTEE Classification
Arts & Culture
654
Education
567
Philanthropy
408
Human Services
379
Religion
331
Recreation & Sports
227
Community Improvement
166
Environment
154
Health Care
153
International
131
Youth Development
116
Crime & Legal
82
Housing & Shelter
81
Animal-Related
71
Mental Health
71
Science & Tech
69
Public Benefit
60
Civil Rights
58
Unknown
55
Voluntary Health
47
Food & Agriculture
38
Medical Research
35
Employment
27
Public Safety
14
Social Science
11
Mutual Benefit
2
78.8%of all nonprofit assets are held by the 10 largest organizations

Top 10 hold $104.2B of $132.1B total

Nonprofit Size Distribution

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF

Number of nonprofits by total asset size

When Were Nonprofits Founded?

Source: IRS Ruling Date

Number of currently active nonprofits by founding decade

Nonprofits per 10K Residents vs Similar Cities

Source: IRS BMF + Census ACS

Compared to cities with population 500,000 - 1,000,000

Largest Nonprofits in Seattle

Source: IRS Exempt Organizations BMF
OrganizationCategoryAssetsIncomeEst.IRS
GATES FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$78.7B$8.2B2007
SEATTLE CHILDRENS HOSPITALHealth Care$5.6B$2.9B1986
PROVIDENCE HEALTH & SERVICES OREGONHealth Care$4.7B$6.2B2001
PROVIDENCE HEALTH SYSTEM-SOUTHERN CALIFORNIAHealth Care$3.5B$2.4B1946
FRED HUTCHINSON CANCER CENTERHealth Care$3.5B$2.8B2000
CASEY FAMILY PROGRAMSPhilanthropy$2.7B$211.0M1967
THE SEATTLE FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$1.4B$785.0M1947
VIRGINIA MASON MEDICAL CENTERHealth Care$1.4B$1.3B1935
ALLEN FAMILY PHILANTHROPIESPhilanthropy$1.4B$1.9B1989
SEATTLE CHILDRENS HEALTHCARE SYSTEMHealth Care$1.3B$144.1M1984
SEATTLE UNIVERSITYβ€”$971.5M$741.1M1992
MARGUERITE CASEY FOUNDATIONHuman Services$876.6M$484.6M2000
ROOTS AND WINGS FOUNDATION INCPhilanthropy$611.8M$255.0M2019
LAKESIDE SCHOOLEducation$590.5M$214.9M1952
PROVIDENCE SAINT JOHNS HEALTH CENTERHealth Care$523.1M$501.6M1946
LOW INCOME HOUSING INSTITUTEUnknown$490.1M$108.6M1997
SEA MAR COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTERSHealth Care$458.2M$563.8M1978
PROVIDENCE HEALTH & SERVICES MTHealth Care$431.8M$567.8M1946
SATTERBERG FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$425.6M$63.6M1991
PATHInternational$416.1M$393.8M1982
SEATTLE ART MUSEUMArts & Culture$414.0M$98.7M1934
BELLWETHER HOUSINGβ€”$387.8M$51.5M1980
ALLEN INSTITUTEMedical Research$367.1M$272.1M2004
PLYMOUTH HOUSING GROUPHousing & Shelter$356.5M$74.6M1980
SCHULTZ FAMILY FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$355.2M$39.7M1998
SEATTLE PACIFIC UNIVERSITYEducation$346.5M$166.1M1943
WASHINGTON RESEARCH FOUNDATIONMedical Research$344.2M$43.2M2014
ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PHYSICIANSEducation$334.8M$504.8M1993
THE SEATTLE ACADEMY OF ARTS AND SCIENCESEducation$320.9M$99.0M1984
LOS ANGELES COUNTY FACILITIES INCCommunity Improvement$312.8M$17.9M2017
GIVING GROUSBECK FAZZALARIPhilanthropy$309.2M$10.8M2011
YOUNG WOMENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF SEATTLE-KING COUNTY-SNOHOMISH CHuman Services$300.8M$103.8M1936
SWEDISH EDMONDSHealth Care$280.1M$321.0M2013
THE YOUNG MENS CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF GREATER SEATTLEHuman Services$270.1M$177.0M1942
HORIZON HOUSEHuman Services$252.9M$52.7M1964
LOS ANGELES COUNTY FACILITIES 2 INCPublic Benefit$242.3M$2.3M2019
GROUSEMONT FOUNDATIONβ€”$240.5M$38.0M1985
GLOBAL PARTNERSHIPSMental Health$224.1M$16.4M2003
SEATTLE AQUARIUM SOCIETY-SEASAnimal-Related$211.4M$54.8M1983
FIRCREST PROPERTIESEducation$203.5M$5892019
SWEDISH MEDICAL CENTER FOUNDATIONHealth Care$201.9M$80.8M1978
SURVIVE A STROKE FOUNDATIONVoluntary Health$195.6M$70K2013
SEATTLE PACIFIC FOUNDATIONEducation$192.7M$980K1979
PORTAGE BAY INSURANCEMutual Benefit$187.4M$55.6M2005
CATHOLIC COMMUNITY SERVICES OF WESTERN WASHINGTONHuman Services$181.2M$332.6M1946
UNIVERSITY PREPARATORY ACADEMYEducation$166.5M$36.3M1976
ARCHDIOCESAN HOUSING AUTHORITYHousing & Shelter$162.8M$54.2M1946
SAHSEN FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$157.2M$18.7M2010
BEZOS FAMILY FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$154.2M$375.8M2003
WILBURFORCE FOUNDATIONPhilanthropy$153.3M$68.1M1991

Seattle, WA has 5,109 registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations with combined assets of $132.1B. The most common category is Arts, Culture & Humanities, with 654 organizations. 1,022 nonprofits have assets exceeding $1 million. That works out to 68.9 nonprofits per 10,000 residents. The oldest active nonprofit dates back to 1903.

SBA Lending Overview

Source: SBA FOIA Loan-Level Data

Total SBA Loans

7,646

Total Approved

$2.5B

Jobs Supported

65,601

Per 10K Residents

103.1

SBA loans

+45.8% vs peers avg

Unique Lenders

222

Top Lender

U.S. Bank, National Association

1,133 loans

Top Industry

Accommodation & Food Services

Data Span

1992–2026

Loan Program Breakdown

Source: SBA FOIA
7(a)95% of all loans

Loans

7,231

Total Amount

$2.2B

Avg Loan

$303,593

Median Loan

$110,364

SBA Guaranteed

$1.6B(74%)

Jobs Supported

60,651

5045% of all loans

Loans

415

Total Amount

$308.7M

Avg Loan

$743,745

Median Loan

$517,000

7(a) β€” 95%504 β€” 5%

Recent Activity (Last 5 Years)

Source: SBA FOIA

Recent Loans

972

13% of all-time total

Recent Amount

$589.7M

24% of all-time total

Avg Recent Loan

$606,712

Top Industries Funded

Source: SBA FOIA / NAICS Codes
Accommodation & Food Services1,314 loans
NAICS 72
$430.6M
Professional & Technical Services878 loans
NAICS 54
$258.9M
Retail Trade723 loans
NAICS 44
$294.8M
Health Care & Social Assistance579 loans
NAICS 62
$257.7M
Other Services576 loans
NAICS 81
$133.1M

SBA Loans per 10K Residents vs Similar Cities

Source: SBA FOIA + Census ACS

Compared to cities with population 500,000 - 1,000,000

Top SBA Borrowers

Source: SBA FOIA
BusinessLoansAmount
Ishaan Group Llc2$10.0M
Ace Galvanizing Inc.4$7.1M
Df/net Research Inc.4$6.6M
Olympic Hot Tub Company Inc3$6.5M
Kn Holding Llc2$6.0M
Kang’s Investments Inc.2$5.3M
Dersu Llc2$5.2M
Khinda Llc3$5.2M
Champion Properties Llc1$5.2M
Green Lake Brewing Company Llc2$5.2M

Seattle, WA has received 7,646 SBA loans totaling $2.5B in approved funding between 1992 and 2026. The 7(a) program accounts for 7,231 loans (95% of the total), supporting 60,651 jobs. The 504 program, focused on real estate and large equipment, has funded 415 loans totaling $308.7M. The most common industry receiving SBA funding is Accommodation & Food Services. The most active SBA lender in Seattle is U.S. Bank, National Association with 1,133 loans. That works out to 103.1 SBA loans per 10,000 residents.

ZIP Code Overview

Source: Census ACS

ZIP Codes

43

Total Population

1,170,623

Avg Median Income

-$61,892,850

Avg Home Value

-$61,124,046

ZIP Code Details

Source: Census ACS
ZIP CodePopulationMedian IncomeHome ValueMedian RentArea (sq mi)
9800439,435$176,367$2,000,001$2,7067.3
9800521,929$158,396$1,373,000$2,3807.3
9800640,770$197,344$1,233,500$2,86911.3
9800726,838$126,814$934,600$2,2764.3
9803340,662$174,005$1,259,900$2,3869.2
9803451,836$128,974$875,200$2,3249.8
980392,889$249,688$2,000,001$3,5011.4
9804025,282$202,359$1,884,200$2,4646.4
9805636,872$108,596$726,300$1,9927.6
9810116,396$128,143$741,400$2,4760.5
9810226,583$114,395$988,700$1,9201.3
9810351,988$127,372$1,012,900$2,0064.6
9810415,870$61,866$663,000$1,5110.9
9810549,229$78,691$1,261,100$1,8033.8
9810628,889$115,529$666,800$1,8245.5
9810728,390$137,748$924,900$2,1942.2
9810824,430$90,806$693,500$1,4637.4
9810932,552$130,845$986,000$2,3291.9
9811024,607$159,882$1,076,200$2,08127.6
9811223,961$162,073$1,407,400$2,0623.2
9811554,248$148,190$1,041,500$2,1186.5
9811628,091$130,504$917,000$2,0333.0
9811735,147$182,500$1,028,100$2,1974.0
9811849,560$109,085$746,400$1,8316.2
9811926,390$125,021$1,032,500$1,9632.4
9812120,904$148,974$796,600$2,3290.4
9812242,001$106,479$929,400$1,9912.3
9812543,807$96,725$844,500$1,8565.4
9812622,433$114,030$751,900$1,7083.1
9813352,620$92,371$719,100$1,7947.1
98134779$66,119$385,300$1,5513.3
9813617,299$153,636$900,000$1,9172.3
9814433,048$94,051$890,400$1,8053.4
9814628,182$108,460$642,300$1,7214.6
981540N/AN/AN/A0.0
98164235$250,001$714,600N/A0.0
9816834,814$84,937$500,600$1,7248.8
981740N/AN/AN/A0.0
9817720,506$162,607$995,700$2,1235.6
9817825,929$93,786$628,200$1,8364.9
981952,471N/AN/AN/A0.4
9819922,751$176,729$1,160,000$2,4614.2
983530N/AN/AN/A0.8

Seattle, WA has 43 ZIP codes with a combined population of 1,170,623. The average median household income across all ZIP codes is -$61,892,850. The average median home value is -$61,124,046. The average median monthly rent is -$77,517,530.

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