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State GDP

Millions of current dollars, 2025. Every state colored from one pull, joined to the map by FIPS code.

Texas: $2.90TCalifornia: $4.25TKentucky: $307BGeorgia: $925BWisconsin: $473BOregon: $343BMissouri: $468BVirginia: $798BTennessee: $590BLouisiana: $340BNew York: $2.47TIdaho: $136BFlorida: $1.83TIllinois: $1.20TMontana: $82BMinnesota: $531BMaryland: $568BIowa: $277BDistrict of Columbia: $193BOhio: $967BNebraska: $198BWashington: $895BSouth Dakota: $81BOklahoma: $274BWyoming: $53BWest Virginia: $109BIndiana: $545BMassachusetts: $820BNevada: $281BNorth Dakota: $82BArkansas: $198BMississippi: $165BColorado: $584BNorth Carolina: $894BUtah: $316BHawaii: $125BNew Mexico: $153BKansas: $241BRhode Island: $84BMichigan: $730BAlaska: $75BDelaware: $117BAlabama: $341BSouth Carolina: $379BMaine: $103BNew Jersey: $887BPennsylvania: $1.06TNew Hampshire: $126BArizona: $598BConnecticut: $376BVermont: $48B
$48B
$4.25T

Shaded on a log scale — each step up in color is roughly a multiple more, not a fixed dollar amount.

Highest: California $4.25T · Lowest: Vermont $48B

Source: U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis · Regional GDP · SAGDP2 · BEA Regional · 2025

Reading it. Total output, not income per person. Current (nominal) dollars, so changes from year to year include inflation.

Bigger is not richer. GDP is total output, so this map mostly tracks population — the largest economies are simply the most populous states. To compare living standards, look at income or output per person, not the total.