These 10 states are America’s best for quality of life in 2025

Do you Agree with this list?

  • Yeah

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Nope

    Votes: 1 100.0%
  • I don't live in the US. I pray for y'all everyday.

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    1

Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
With talent in short supply and the nation’s workforce more mobile than ever, companies are seeking to locate in places where workers want to live. That makes quality of life an economic issue. And state economic development organizations are leaning into that as they pitch their states to business.

“Connecticut is one state with a whole lot of everything,” the state’s Department of Economic and Community Development declares on its website, which goes on to tout the state’s “good quality of life” more than half a dozen times.


“New Mexico offers a place your employees will love and want to stay,” its state economic development website says.

“The good life is calling,” says Nebraska.

But where is the best life? CNBC’s annual competitiveness study, America’s Top States for Business, is here to find out. Because quality of life has become so essential in attracting quality talent, we consider it among ten categories of competitiveness. While any state can say it is a great place to live, we put those claims to the test using empirical data.

The category considers factors including the crime rate, air quality, and the cost and availability of child care. We also consider legal protections for workers, and protections against discrimination. And with data showing younger workers considering reproductive rights in their choice of where they are willing to live, we factor those state laws in our rankings as well.

Under this year’s methodology, Quality of Life represents 10.6% of a state’s total Top States score.


Some states do not measure up well when it comes to quality of life. But these states are America’s most desirable places to live and work in.
ARLINGTON, VA, JUNE 24: A pedestrian jogs along the George Washington Memorial Parkway at sunrise in Arlington, Virginia, on June 24, 2025. (Photo by Tom Brenner for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

A pedestrian jogs along the George Washington Memorial Parkway at sunrise in Arlington, Virginia, on June 24, 2025.
Tom Brenner | The Washington Post | Getty Images
With some 2.6 million people packed into just 1,300 square miles, Northern Virginia is certainly crowded. But it often doesn’t feel that way.

Crime in the commonwealth is on the low side despite its size. And Virginians are healthy, ranking in the top ten nationally for frequent exercise, according to the United Health Foundation.

Virginia’s air quality is generally good, with only Arlington and Fairfax Counties in the D.C. Metro area receiving poor grades for ozone pollution, according to the American Lung Association.

But child care can be scarce, with just about 1,500 licensed centers in a state of 8.8 million people, according to Child Care Aware of America. It can also be pricey, at about 11% of median income for a two-income household.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 167 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B-)

Strengths: Air Quality, Health, Low Crime Rate

Weakness: Child Care
108166650-1751399941707-gettyimages-702548009-is09b416w.jpeg

Men walking in field landscape near Hastings, Nebraska.
Adam C Bartlett | Connect Images | Getty Images
Life in the heartland is as healthy and wholesome as it is cracked up to be, at least by the numbers in The Cornhusker State. With only 3,372 violent offenses in 2023 in a state of nearly two million people, according to FBI statistics, the crime rate is the sixth lowest in the nation.

Nebraska also ranks in the top five states for clean air, based on data from the American Lung Association and the non-profit First Street Foundation.

And Nebraskans are healthy, with among the lowest incidences of mental and physical distress, and the second lowest rate of drug deaths, according to the United Health Foundation.

But child care is relatively scarce, and expensive. Nebraska has just 864 licensed child care centers, and child care costs, on average, 15% of the median income for a two-parent household. State law bars private insurance coverage for abortions, which are banned after 12 weeks.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 167 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B-)

Strengths: Air Quality, Health, Low Crime Rate

Weaknesses: Child Care, Reproductive Rights
Boston, MA - June 9: A woman gets an acupuncture treatment from an oncology acupuncturist, Dongyan Yu, at The Leonard P. Zakim Center for Integrative Therapies and Healthy Living at Dana-Farber. (Photo by Stan Grossfeld/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

A woman gets an acupuncture treatment from an oncology acupuncturist, Dongyan Yu, at The Leonard P. Zakim Center for Integrative Therapies and Healthy Living at Dana-Farber on June 9, 2025.
Stan Grossfeld | The Boston Globe | Getty Images
The Bay State is America’s healthiest, with the lowest incidence of premature death, according to the United Health Foundation. It might have to do with the fact that Massachusetts ranks No. 1 in primary care doctors and mental health providers per capita, not to mention number two for dentists. Just 2.6% of Massachusetts residents lack health insurance — the lowest percentage in the country — compared to nearly 8% nationally.

Massachusetts is a leader in worker protections, according to Oxfam America’s annual scorecard on Best and Worst States to Work in the U.S. — particularly when it comes to guaranteeing the right to organize.

However, air quality is poor, and child care, while more accessible than in many states, is expensive.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 167 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B-)

Strengths: Health, Worker Protections

Weaknesses: Air Quality, Child Care
Two technicians wearing PPE walking past racks of equipment in a data center for cryptocurrency mining, cloud services and AI computing in a large, temperature controlled warehouse in a remote location in Stutsman County, North Dakota.


Halbergman | E+ | Getty Images
No state offers more accessible and affordable child care than The Peace Garden State, with 462 licensed child care centers in a state of fewer than 800,000 people. A two-income household making the median income can expect to spend only about 9% of it on child care.

Add the fact that crime is low and the air is clean, and you get a relatively stress-free environment. North Dakotans report the second-lowest incidences of mental and physical distress in the nation. The state also has the second-lowest level of food insecurity in the nation.

But while North Dakota excels in feeding its families, it does not score well in protecting its workers.

North Dakota ranks 40th on the Oxfam scorecard, meeting just three of the 16 criteria the organization sets for worker protection. While state law requires equal pay across gender and race, and it includes protections against sexual harassment and child labor, it does not allow for things like paid family and sick leave. Nor does the state extend protections to agricultural workers, domestic workers, or warehouse workers.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 171 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B)

Strengths: Child Care, Health, Air Quality, Low Crime Rate

Weakness: Worker Protections
Embrace the precious moments of love and laughter as a mother and toddler play along the shores of Ho'okipa Beach in Maui. The soft sands and gentle waves provide a backdrop to their shared joy, creating a harmonious scene of familial bliss. In the embrace of Maui's coastal beauty, this heartwarming connection becomes a timeless memory etched in the sands of Ho'okipa.

A mother and toddler play along the shores of Ho’okipa Beach in Maui.
Yiming Chen | Moment | Getty Images
How could a paradise like The Aloha State not finish at the very top of a state quality of life ranking? Crime is low, the environment is pristine, and Hawaii prides itself on its welcoming, Aloha spirit. The problem is that the state fails badly when it comes to caring for its keiki, the affectionate Hawaiian term for children.

Hawaii has just 544 licensed child care centers in a state of 1.8 million people. Those who can get their children into child care will pay dearly for it — 18% of median income for a two-income household, the highest in the nation.

Ready Keiki, a multi-faceted state plan established in 2023, aims to ensure pre-school access for all 3 and 4-year-olds by 2032. It still has a long way to go.

Hawaii also has health issues. While the vast majority of Hawaiians have health insurance, the state ranks 34th in primary care physicians per capita.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 173 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B)

Strengths: Low Crime Rate, Air Quality, Inclusiveness

Weaknesses: Child Care, Health Care
A stunning aerial stock photo of New Haven, Connecticut, showcasing the city's layout, architecture, and surrounding landscape from above.

New Haven, Connecticut.
Ashley Rk Smith | Istock | Getty Images
When choosing a place to live, you won’t find one that is much safer or healthier than The Nutmeg State.

With just 5,573 violent offenses in a state of 3.6 million people in 2023, Connecticut had the fourth lowest crime rate in the nation. The United Health Foundation ranks the state 5th for overall health, with low instances of physical and mental stress, and one of the nation’s lowest obesity rates. However, the state has seen a 235% increase in drug deaths since 2007.

The state has robust worker protections and inclusive state laws. But it also has America’s worst air quality, with high levels of both ozone and particulate matter.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 179 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B)

Strengths: Low Crime Rate, Health, Inclusiveness

Weakness: Air Quality
North America, USA, Minnesota, Rochester, Mayo Clinic, Siebens Building. (Photo by: Bernard Friel/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

Mayo Clinic, Siebens building in Rochester, Minnesota.
Bernard Friel | UCG | Universal Images Group | Getty Images
In The Land of 10,000 Lakes, people pride themselves on being “Minnesota nice,” and that applies to pretty much everyone. Minnesotans enjoy broad protections against discrimination, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

Worker rights and reproductive rights are strong as well. In 2023, a year before he became a household name as the Democratic Vice Presidential nominee, Gov. Tim Walz signed into law the Protect Reproductive Options (PRO) Act, which codifies access to abortion and reproductive health care as a fundamental right.

The home of the renowned Mayo Clinic, Minnesota has an outstanding health system. The state ranks 7th in primary physicians per capita, and it has among the lowest percentages of people without health insurance.

But Minnesota does not do as well in child care, with only about 1,800 licensed child care centers in a state of nearly 6 million people. Child care in Minnesota eats up, on average, 14% of a two-parent household’s income, according to Child Care Aware of America.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 189 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: B+)

Strengths: Inclusiveness, Worker Protections, Reproductive Rights, Health

Weakness: Child Care
SEASIDE HEIGHTS, NEW JERSEY - MAY 25: People walk on the Broadwalk on May 25, 2025 in Seaside Heights, New Jersey. Memorial Day weekend is the unofficial start of the beach season and is historically one of the biggest travel weekends in the U.S. (Photo by Kena Betancur/Getty Images)

People walk on the Broadwalk on May 25, 2025 in Seaside Heights, New Jersey.
Kena Betancur | Getty Images
The Garden State has always been the butt of jokes. But by the numbers, it is an outstanding place to live. New Jersey has the ninth lowest violent crime rate in the nation. In 2023, the state saw its fewest number of murders in more than 40 years, according to FBI statistics.

New Jersey is a healthy state, with the smallest percentage of adults with multiple chronic conditions, and has the second lowest rate of premature deaths, according to the United Health Foundation.

But one area where New Jersey does live down to its reputation is air quality — the third worst in the nation, based on data from the American Lung Association and the non-profit First Street Foundation.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 201 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: A-)

Strengths: Low Crime Rate, Health, Inclusiveness

Weakness: Air Quality
108166668-1751401845647-gettyimages-602983055-ti03007857.jpeg


Daniel Grill/tetra Images | Tetra Images | Getty Images
No state is safer than The Pine Tree State. With just 1,458 violent offenses in a state of 1.4 million people, Mainers enjoy America’s lowest crime rate.

Maine is also a welcoming state. It earned a near-perfect score from the Movement Advancement Project, a non-profit think tank that studies state policies affecting the LGBTQ+ population. But it also earned the ire of the Trump administration, which unsuccessfully tried to block school lunch funding over the state’s refusal to bar transgender girls from girls’ sports.

At the same time, drug deaths have nearly tripled in Maine since 2013, and residents report high incidences of physical and mental stress.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 207 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: A)

Strengths: Low Crime Rate, Inclusiveness, Air Quality

Weakness: Health
Highway Vermont Route 100 VT-100 View in Gold Brook, Stowe, Vermont, USA

Stowe, Vermont.
Jimfeng | E+ | Getty Images
The Green Mountain State marks its fifth consecutive year on top of the Quality of Life category in CNBC’s Top States for Business study. The crime rate is among the lowest in the nation, the air is pristine, and Vermonters are healthy — although, as in neighboring Maine, the state has seen an uptick in drug deaths.

Vermont state laws are inclusive and welcoming. The state offers broad protections against discrimination of all kinds. No state is more protective of reproductive rights than Vermont, which in 2022 became the first state to enshrine them in its constitution.

Vermont is also among the easiest states to vote in, according to the Election Law Journal. The state offers 45 days of early voting, and all are eligible to vote by mail. Photo ID is required for those registering for the first time.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 228 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: A+)

Strengths: Reproductive Rights, Inclusiveness, Health, Air Quality

Weaknesses: None. (Vermont finished in the top ten in all but two Quality of Life metrics, and no lower than 15th.)
 
There's a common feature to the worst states

These states are America’s worst for quality of life in 2025​

Published Mon, Jul 14 202511:37 AM EDT

American business is in the grips of a serious labor shortage, even though hiring has slowed and artificial intelligence is picking up more of the slack.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says that for every 100 job openings, only 92 workers are available to fill them. That means the nation is short about 1 million workers. To try and meet the demand, companies are seeking locations that are attractive to prospective employees. That makes quality of life a business imperative.


Each year, CNBC’s annual rankings of state business climates — America’s Top States for Business —considers Quality of Life among ten categories of competitiveness. Under this year’s methodology, the category makes up 10.6% of a state’s overall score. We consider factors like crime, health care, air quality, and the price and availability of child care. We also consider inclusiveness of state laws, such as legal protections against discrimination. And with data showing younger workers considering reproductive rights in their choice of where they are willing to live, we factor those state laws in our rankings as well.

Some states are particularly welcoming to workers. These are not those states. They are the states with America’s worst quality of life in 2025.
File: A Tulsa Police officer takes cover behind a car with a weapon at the scene of a fatal shooting.

File: A Tulsa Police officer takes cover behind a car with a weapon at the scene of a fatal shooting.
Mike Simons | Tulsa World | AP
Just like in the rest of the country, violent crime in Oklahoma has been trending gradually lower in recent years. But at roughly 418 offenses per 100,000 people in 2023, the Sooner State’s violent crime rate is the 14th highest in the country, according to FBI statistics. Of particular concern is a sharp rise in domestic violence homicides, which State Attorney General Gentner Drummond recently called an “epidemic.”

“We must continue strengthening our statewide efforts to hold abusers accountable and to provide protection and support for victims,” Drummond said in a statement in February.

Oklahoma offers limited protections against discrimination, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures, and it has one of the nation’s strictest abortion bans.


2025 Quality of Life Score: 97 out of 265 points (Top States Grade: D-)

Strengths: Child Care, Air Quality

Weaknesses: Crime, Health, Reproductive Rights
WASHINGTON, DC - JUNE 10: Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders speaks before U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins signs three new SNAP food choice waivers for the states of Idaho, Utah, and Arkansas in her office at the United States Department of Agriculture Whitten Building on June 10, 2025 in Washington, DC. The wavers will limit what the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program can select as eligible foods, targeting unhealthy food. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders speaks before U.S. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins signs three new SNAP food choice waivers for the states of Idaho, Utah, and Arkansas in her office at the United States Department of Agriculture Whitten Building on June 10, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Andrew Harnik | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Life can be rough in the Natural State, which has the sixth-highest percentage of adults in frequent mental distress, according to the United Health Foundation. Nearly 19% of Arkansas households are food insecure. That’s the highest rate in the country. One in five Arkansans, and one in six Arkansas children, face hunger.

“It’s clear that our state is in critical need of comprehensive solutions to address these sobering statistics and ensure that all Arkansans have access to sufficient and nutritious food,” said Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders, who issued an executive order last fall directing state agencies to address the problem.

She has also signed legislation providing free breakfast for public school students regardless of their family’s income.

The violent crime rate in Arkansas is the fourth highest in the country, and the state has among America’s most restrictive voting laws.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 95 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: D-)

Strengths: Child Care, Air Quality

Weaknesses: Health, Crime, Inclusiveness
MONTGOMERY, AL - MARCH 30: Christa White (L) and her daughter attend a rally at the Alabama State House to draw attention to the anti-transgender legislation introduced in Alabama on March 30, 2021 in Montgomery, Alabama. There are so far 192 anti-LGBTQ bills under consideration in state legislatures across the United States. Of those, 93 directly target transgender people. (Photo by Julie Bennett/Getty Images)

Christa White (L) and her daughter attend a rally at the Alabama State House to draw attention to the anti-transgender legislation introduced in Alabama on March 30, 2021 in Montgomery, Alabama.
Julie Bennett | Getty Images News | Getty Images
The Heart of Dixie might pride itself on Southern hospitality, but its state laws suggest that the hospitality does not extend to everyone.

Alabama is one of just five states with no law protecting non-disabled people against discrimination in public accommodations, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures.

And in February, Gov. Kay Ivey signed the “What is a Woman Act,” defining a person’s gender based on the sex organs they were born with.

“If the Good Lord made you a boy, you’re a boy,” said Ivey. “And if he made you a girl, you’re a girl.”

Opponents said the law will be used to justify widespread discrimination against transgender people.

The state eschews most worker protections, according to Oxfam America, which ranks Alabama 49th on its annual Best States to Work scorecard.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 92 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strengths: Air Quality, Child Care

Weaknesses: Inclusiveness, Worker Protections
ATLANTA, GA - MAY 3: Police officers work the scene of a shooting at a Northside Hospital medical facility on May 3, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. Police say one person was killed and four others injured in the shooting and the suspect is still at large. (Photo by Megan Varner/Getty Images)

Police officers work the scene of a shooting at a Northside Hospital medical facility on May 3, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia.
Megan Varner | Getty Images News | Getty Images
While the overall violent crime rate in Georgia is roughly in line with the national average, it has one of the highest homicide rates in the country.

That is but one factor in an overall unhealthy environment in The Peach State. More than 11% of the population lacks health insurance, the third-highest rate in the country. The state ranks 40th for primary care doctors per capita, and 48th for mental health providers, according to the United Health Foundation.

The Commonwealth Fund ranks Georgia 45th in its latest Scorecard on State Health System Performance, which grades the states on health care access, prevention and treatment, efficiency, healthy lives, and health disparities.

Georgia is another one of the five states with no anti-discrimination protections for non-disabled people, and it offers few protections for workers beyond a guarantee of equal pay based on race and gender.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 89 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strength: Child Care

Weaknesses: Worker Protections, Health, Inclusiveness
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - FEBRUARY 05: A New Orleans police vehicle parked on the street ahead of Super Bowl LIX on February 05, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana. (Photo by Aaron M. Sprecher/Getty Images)

A New Orleans police vehicle parked on the street ahead of Super Bowl LIX on February 05, 2025 in New Orleans, Louisiana.
Aaron M. Sprecher | Getty Images Sport | Getty Images
At around 521 violent crimes per 100,000 people in 2023, the Pelican State has America’s fifth-highest crime rate. And those statistics predate this year’s New Year’s Day attack on Bourbon Street in New Orleans, where a man drove a pickup truck into a crowd of revelers, killing 14.

Louisiana also has among the nation’s strictest abortion bans, according to the Guttmacher Institute, banning the procedure in all except very limited circumstances.

The state passed eight new voting laws last year that the Brennan Center for Justice deems “restrictive,” including multiple crackdowns on absentee voting.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 87 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strengths: Child Care, Air Quality

Weaknesses: Crime, Inclusiveness, Reproductive Rights
A waitress in a red-and-white polka dot dress balances four plates of breakfast foods as she heads to patrons’ table at a busy diner.


Patricia Marroquin | Moment | Getty Images
The Beehive State derives its nickname from the industriousness of its workforce. But those workers get few protections in exchange for their hard labor.

Even as the cost of living rises in fast-growing parts of the state like Silicon Slopes outside Salt Lake City, the state has kept the minimum wage at the federal rate of $7.25 an hour. And unlike in many states, Utah prohibits local governments setting their minimum wages any higher.

With an average household size roughly 17% higher than the national average, according to Census data, Utah families have a lot of children to care for. And the state is doing poorly in meeting their needs. Utah ranks 48th in licensed child care centers per capita, according to Child Care Aware of America, which also says that a married Utah couple with a median income can expect to spend about 12% of it on child care.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 87 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strength: Crime Rate

Weaknesses: Child Care, Worker Protections, Air Quality
Daniela Guerrero addresses the IDEM representatives during a public meeting to discuss air permitting for BP Products of North America. East Chicago school officials cancelled a planned Indiana Department of Environmental Management (IDEM) public meeting more than a week ago, a second one was held at Calumet College of St. Joseph in Whiting on Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024. (John Smierciak/Post Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)

Daniela Guerrero addresses the IDEM representatives during a public meeting to discuss air permitting for BP Products of North America.
Chicago Tribune | Tribune News Service | Getty Images
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services defines affordable child care as costing no more than 7% of a household’s income. In Indiana, it costs twice that for a two-parent household. For a single parent, it can cost a stunning 46%.

Business groups like the U.S. Chamber of Commerce have identified child care as one of the major factors in getting people back into the workforce. It is also a major quality of life consideration for young families, and it is one of the areas where Indiana falls short. But it is not the only one.

Air quality is poor, according to data from the American Lung Association and First Street Foundation, with high levels of ozone and particulate matter. Indiana also has a strict abortion ban and limited anti-discrimination protections.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 73 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strength: Crime Rate

Weaknesses: Child Care, Reproductive Rights, Inclusiveness, Air Quality
Anti-abortion rights supporters take part in a Rally for Life march and celebration outside the Texas State Capitol on January 27, 2024, in Austin, Texas. This event commemorates the Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision that imposed legal abortion on Texas and the entire nation throughout all nine months of pregnancy and celebrates the overturning of the precedent set in 1973. (Photo by SUZANNE CORDEIRO / AFP) (Photo by SUZANNE CORDEIRO/AFP via Getty Images)

Anti-abortion rights supporters take part in a “Rally for Life” march and celebration outside the Texas State Capitol on January 27, 2024, in Austin, Texas.
Suzanne Cordeiro | Afp | Getty Images
The Lone Star State is consistently a top destination for skilled workers — they flock to Texas for its robust economy and one of the best job markets in the nation. But that does not mean that the quality of life there isn’t lacking.

Despite world-class institutions like the Texas Medical Center and the MD Anderson Cancer Center, access to care for the average Texan is poor. According to the United Health Foundation, Texas has the nation’s lowest number of primary care doctors per capita, the second-lowest number of mental health providers, and it consistently has the highest rate of people without health insurance.

The state has among America’s strictest abortion bans, and crime is on the high side.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 72 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strengths: Child Care, Air Quality

Weaknesses: Health Care, Reproductive Rights, Worker Protections, Crime
WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 04: Transgender rights supporters rally outside of the U.S. Supreme Court as the high court hears arguments in a case on transgender health rights on December 04, 2024 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing arguments in US v. Skrmetti, a case about Tennessee's law banning gender-affirming care for minors and if it violates the Constitution’s equal protection guarantee. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Transgender rights supporters rally outside of the U.S. Supreme Court as the high court hears arguments in a case on transgender health rights on December 04, 2024 in Washington, DC. The Supreme Court is hearing arguments in US v. Skrmetti, a case about Tennessee’s law banning gender-affirming care for minors and if it violates the Constitution’s equal protection guarantee.
Kevin Dietsch | Getty Images News | Getty Images
Governor Bill Lee’s 2025-26 budget, signed into law this spring, includes $175 million in grants to local communities to help them fight crime. By the numbers, that money is badly needed in the Volunteer State. Tennessee has America’s third-highest violent crime rate, according to FBI statistics, making it a particularly dangerous place to live, and CNBC’s bottom state for Quality of Life in 2025.

Tennessee has also been at the forefront of legislation limiting the rights of its LGBTQ+ population, beginning as far back as 2015. The state was among the earliest to codify a person’s gender based on their anatomy, passing its law in 2023.

State laws guarantee equal pay and bar sexual harassment. But beyond that, there are few protections for workers in Tennessee.

2025 Quality of Life Score: 61 out of 265 Points (Top States Grade: F)

Strength: Air Quality

Weaknesses: Crime Rate, Inclusiveness, Worker Protections
 
Last edited:
Back
Top