WalletHub, a personal finance company, recently analyzed which U.S. states are the best and worst to retire in in 2025. Florida ranked highly, but other findings were surprising.
WalletHub released a report listing the most unsafe states in the US. Louisiana, Mississippi, and Texas were the top three least safe states.
People often say Floridians don’t know how to drive, but a new WalletHub study ranks Florida as the 14th best state to drive in.
When someone chooses where to retire, a number of things can impact the decision. WalletHub considered a number of factors in its recent study on best and worst states to retire. WalletHub compared each state across 46 metrics including tax rates,
The WalletHub ranking was made possible by taking data from the U.S. Census Bureau, Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Council for Community and Economic Research, among a handful of other sources.
When it comes to the smallest wealth gaps by race and ethnicity, Missouri is the state with the 8th smallest gap for 2025. That’s according to personal finance website WalletHub.com which used 21
New York ranks among the states with the fewest collection accounts per resident, according to a new report from WalletHub that examines financial distress across the country.
According to new research from WalletHub, Arizona ranks 42nd among states for wealth disparities between racial and ethnic groups.
However, according to the list, California’s plentiful sunshine and access to maintenance facilities saved it from being the worst state for driving. The state ranked first for the fewest days with precipitation, beating out Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico and Texas.
People often say Floridians don’t know how to drive, but a new WalletHub study ranks Florida as the 14th best state to drive in.
A new study has been released that ranks all 50 states on the number of debt collection accounts focused on its consumers. The report from consumer group Wallethub examines collection accounts created when debts have gone unpaid and the original creditor sells that debt to a collector.