Families depend on women’s wages more than ever, but women working full time, year round are typically paid less than full time, year round male workers in every state. Nationally, women working full time, year round typically make only 82 cents for every dollar a man makes and the size of the disparity varies by state. Women fare best in California and New York, where women working full time, year round typically make 88 cents for every dollar their male counterparts make. D.C., Maryland and Nevada follow with the ratio of women’s to men’s earnings at 86 percent or more. Women fare worst relative to men in Louisiana and Wyoming, where women’s earnings represented only 69 and 70 percent of men’s earnings, respectively.

Click on a state below to see its wage gap for women overall, Black women, Latinas, Asian women, Native women, white, non-Hispanic women, Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander women.

Source Note: What a woman makes for every dollar a man makes” is the ratio of women’s and men’s annual median earnings for full time, year round workers. The “wage gap” is the additional money a woman would have to make for every dollar made by a man in order to have equal annual earnings. Figures for women overall by state calculated by NWLC are based on 2018 American Community Survey Data. Figures for Black women, Latinas, Asian women, Native women, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander women, and white-non-Hispanic women calculated by NWLC are based on 2014-2018 American Community Survey Five Year Estimates. For the purposes of this analysis D.C. is considered a state.