Sources & Dashboards

Where the data comes from, and where it goes. Every county measure on this site is drawn from public federal sources and combined into one comparable dataset.

Sources

U.S. public data producers, ordered by how central they are to county-level demographic and health data. Sources tagged In dataset currently feed this site's measures; the rest are key references.

Which poverty measure to use?
The official national poverty figures come from the Current Population Survey (CPS-ASEC). For state and lower-level geographies (county and below), the Census Bureau recommends the American Community Survey (ACS) for income and poverty-rate estimates.
Guidance from Alemayehu Bishaw, Survey Statistician, Poverty Statistics Branch (SEHSD), U.S. Census Bureau, 2022.
Core — the workhorses
The backbone: nearly every demographic, social, economic, and housing measure, down to census tract.
2. CDC WONDER CDC In dataset
The authoritative cause-of-death / mortality data at county level. It is also the raw input for this site's life-expectancy and premature-death figures — but note those are author-calculated here (5-year pooled), not CDC-published statistics.
3. CDC PLACES CDC In dataset
Model-based health outcomes, prevention, risk behaviors, and disability at county and tract — the best small-area health estimates.
Best small-area income & poverty estimates — county and school-district level.
Best small-area health-insurance coverage estimates.
The annual homelessness count. HUD reports by Continuum of Care (CoC), not by county, and publishes no official county crosswalk — so the county figures here come from an author-built CoC-to-county crosswalk, not official HUD county statistics. See the HUD CoCs page for every CoC by state.
The deepest county-level medical data available — 60+ services and conditions — plus facility, hospital, and provider files.
Strong secondary
The health survey that underlies PLACES; usable directly at state / large-area level.
Current-year population where ACS lags (the basis many aggregators use).
Vital-statistics umbrella — births and deaths.
Fatal-injury and violent-death detail by area, race, and cause.
12. CDC — NCHHSTP AtlasPlus CDC In dataset
HIV, STD, hepatitis, and TB surveillance at county level.
Health workforce and facilities — maps, data, and dashboards.
14. SAMHSA — NSDUH SAMHSA
National Survey on Drug Use and Health — substance use & mental health.
15. AHRQ — HCUP AHRQ
Hospital utilization and cost data, tools, and visualizations.
Single-domain authorities — the top source for one topic
The definitive US crime source. City, state, and national coverage — county is limited (needs more research).
Air-quality readings from 5,000+ monitors; coverage follows monitor locations rather than full counties.
The primary federal database on public K–12 schools and districts.
Foster care (AFCARS) and child abuse & neglect (NCANDS / NDACAN); mostly state-level, with some county detail.
Kindergarten vaccination rates by nation and state (no county on the site).
Broader / infrastructure
Monthly Current Population Survey plus the annual social & economic supplement.
Environmental-health indicators at county level.
The full 10-year count — the baseline everything else builds on.
24. IPUMS Univ. of Minnesota
Harmonized microdata — an access layer over ACS, CPS, and many other sources.
Emerging / at-risk
Wastewater-based tracking of COVID and a dozen-plus pathogens — ~1,300 sites covering ~144M people, near real-time. Limited coverage and facing a funding cliff (no CDC funding past Sep 30, 2026 unless Congress restores it), but a promising early-warning signal. See also the privately-funded WastewaterSCAN (Stanford / Emory / Verily), which isn't exposed to the federal cuts.

Measure-level source, vintage, and field IDs for every column that feeds this site are published in data/FullDataSet_columns.csv.

Major National Health Surveys

The survey instruments many of the health sources above draw on, with approximate annual sample sizes. Most report at national (some state) level rather than county.

400,000+ adults / year · state (county via SMART where 500+ respondents) · latest 2024 · the largest
~70,000 interviews / year (2024: 70,241, ages 12+) · national & state · latest 2024
~27,000 adults + ~9,000 children / year (2019 redesign) · national · latest 2024
20,103 students, grades 9–12 (national, 2023) · national · biennial
new panel ~15,000 households / year (~18,500 persons responding, 2023) · national · latest 2023
~5,000 examined / year (2-year cycles) · national · latest cycle 2021–2023 · adds exams & labs
~1,000–3,000 women / year per participating state · state / jurisdiction · maternal & infant

Sample sizes verified against official source pages, latest releases 2023–2024. Surveys refresh annually or biennially — recheck yearly.

Dashboards

Tools and sites that present this data, ranked best-first. A few are also data producers (tagged Also a source); geography tags show how deep each goes. Status verified Jul 2026.

Best — start here
1. County Health Rankings & Roadmaps County Ending 2026
The definitive county-to-county health ranking within each state. Note: RWJF funding ends Dec 2026 — the 2025 release was the last full annual ranking, so treat as end-of-life.
2. CDC PLACES Tract Also a source
The best small-area health estimates as an interactive map/portal — county, place, ZCTA, and census tract. 2025 release.
Broad demographic, economic, and housing measures with maps and charts; counties and places 5,000+. Back online and current (V2025 population, ACS 2020–2024).
Compare metro vs. nonmetro counties nationally and by state; 50+ indicators with unusually strong source documentation.
5. City Health Dashboard Tract Watch (RWJF)
Sub-county health across 970+ cities down to the tract level. RWJF-funded — the same funder exiting County Health Rankings, so worth monitoring.
1,000+ county indicators across ~100 datasets, updated monthly, with map, profiles, and a data-extraction tool.
Clean ACS profiles with state and national comparison down to census tract; current to the 2024 ACS (updated Feb 2026).
800+ health and health-policy indicators by state, with maps, rankings, and a custom state-report builder.
Also strong
Hundreds of sources unified; place explorer, rankings, and natural-language queries down to sub-county.
County cancer incidence and mortality, ranked. Incidence 2018–2022, mortality 2019–2023 (NCI + CDC).
State health rankings, annual (2025 report); 99 measures from 31 sources.
Child well-being measures by state and county (some to city / district). Moved to datacenter.aecf.org.
Plain-language ACS profiles for a single area, county and tract. Single-geography — no cross-area compare.
Profiles for congressional districts and tribal areas — geographies most tools skip.

Archived (no longer updated, kept for reference): 500 Cities (→ PLACES), Dartmouth Atlas, Opportunity Atlas, Measure of America, BCBS Health Index, Economic Innovation Group DCI.